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10076 lines
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10076 lines
438 KiB
Plaintext
155 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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The value of this 360K disk is $7.00. This disk, its
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printout, or copies of either are to be copied and given away,
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but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****
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EDITED BY
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E. HALDEMAN-JULIUS B-733
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A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH,
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SECULAR MOVEMENT
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By JOHN EDWIN McGEE
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**** ****
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CONTENTS
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CHAPTER PAGE
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Preface ................................................ 2
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I ORIGINS ................................................ 2
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II. A PERIOD OF FREE ASSOCIATION
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Basic Features ........................................ 15
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A Masterful Convert ................................... 17
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Literature ............................................ 19
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Assemblages ........................................... 21
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Advancing Secularist Doctrines ........................ 22
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Attacking the Churches ................................ 30
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Opposition to Secularism .............................. 34
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Dissension ............................................ 36
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III. THE BRADLAUGH EPOCH
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Organization .......................................... 38
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Leaders ............................................... 42
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Publications .......................................... 46
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Meetings .............................................. 48
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Ceremonies ............................................ 51
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Furthering the Principles of Secularism ............... 52
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Anti-Church Activities ................................ 68
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The Attack upon Secularism ............................ 70
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Association with Organized International Freethought... 72
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IV. THE FOOTE-COHEN ERA
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Proportions of the Secular Movement ................... 73
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Administrative Affairs ................................ 74
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Outstanding Adherents ................................. 80
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Printed Matter ........................................ 81
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Public Occasions ...................................... 83
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Propagation of Secular Teachings ...................... 84
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Fighting the Religious Interests ...................... 89
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The Campaign against Secularism ....................... 90
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
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V. SIGNIFICANCE .......................................... 92
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Bibliography .......................................... 97
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**** ****
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PREFACE
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Despite the significant part which the British Secular
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Movement has played in bringing about many of the ideas and
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institutions which are of fundamental importance in the Great
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Britain of today, the public has not had ample opportunities for
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acquiring information concerning the Movement. To begin with, the
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history of the undertaking has never been written. Added to this
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is the fact that while many comments have been made on the
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Secular Movement, they almost always have been tinged with the
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emotion of Partisanship, and have departed widely from the
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detached and impartial observations associated with the careful
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historian. Finally, though biographies have been written of the
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most prominent of the Secularist leaders, the authors of these
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books have magnified the persons whose lives they treated at the
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expense of the Secular Movement itself. These facts seemed to me
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to provide ample justification for the writing of a sound history
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of the Secular Movement, and inspired me to attempt to produce
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such a history.
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The entire manuscript was read with much care by Professor
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Preston Slosson, of the University of Michigan. Professor Slosson
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offered many valuable suggestions for the improvement of the
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work. I am grateful indeed for the advice which Professor Slosson
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gave me.
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My debt to my late wife is simply limitless. For many
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laborious months she worked along with me in the libraries,
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helping me to gather the raw materials for the book from the
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almost inexhaustible list of sources -- mainly pamphlets and
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magazines -- which contain them. Besides all this she offered
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valuable suggestions and helped solve knotty problems in
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connection with the preparation of the manuscript. I wish to
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acknowledge my deep appreciation for her assistance.
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JOHN EDWIN McGEE.
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April, 1948.
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**** ****
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CHAPTER I
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ORIGINS
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No phase of the history of Great Britain is more stirring
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than the organized efforts, in the years after the middle of the
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19th century, to achieve a less harsh and cruel existence for the
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great masses of the British common people; and of the numerous
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campaigns for popular reform which marked the post mid-19th
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century period none, was more impressive than the British Secular
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
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Movement. The Secularists, as those who carried on the Secular
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Movement were called, labored for their cause with a zeal which
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at times was almost fanatical. They waged their fight, too,
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simultaneously on many fronts. And, though often discriminated
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against socially for their efforts, they persevered in their
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undertaking almost from the very beginning of the second half of
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the 19th century right down to the present time.
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Except for a few of the leaders, who, because of being, say,
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journalists or small shopkeepers, belonged to the lower middle
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class, the Secularists were virtually all members of the
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workings, classes; and the Secular Movement was undertaken to
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bring to an end a set of conditions which from the working class
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point of view was provokingly unsatisfactory. When the
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Secularists began their work these unfavorable conditions were in
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evidence throughout every sphere of British society. In the
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political realm the laboring masses of men and women counted for
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little indeed. The monarchy itself, though a strictly limited
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one. was identified with the traditions and interests of the
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aristocracy, while the cost of its upkeep (which was
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considerable) fell upon the people as a whole. The House of Lords
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was composed of Church dignitaries and hereditary peers whose
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associations, tastes, and outlook were these of the privileged
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classes. The Members of the House of Commons were elected by
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voters drawn from the middle and upper classes, and belonged
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themselves to these groups. Government was really an affair of,
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by, and for the higher classes.
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The economic and social setup, too, was unfavorable to the
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welfare of The laboring masses. Thanks to the enclosure of lard
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in the country and to the application of machinery to industry in
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the towns, fewer workers were needed by the employing classes
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than were available. In consequence, low wages were paid in cases
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where employment was granted. while in many instances work was
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not to be had on any terms. Poverty thus dogged the heels of the
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working classes, and with poverty went crowded, unwholesome
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living conditions. Then, too, no systematic provision was made
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for the care of those who became destitute, or for those who
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lingered on a while on earth after they were no longer able to
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work. Added to all this was the fact, that there were almost no
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opportunities available to the poor, especially in urban
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districts, for wholesome recreation and entertainment. Week-end
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pleasure trips, for example, even to nearby places, could not be
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afforded. Wide and varied social contacts were out of the
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question. The museums, libraries, and art galleries were all
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closed on Sunday, the one day of the week when workingmen might
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have visited them. Even Sunday music in the parks was
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nonexistent. Bleak indeed were the lives of those whose lot it
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was to toil.
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The schools of the day served the lower classes
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inadequately. No state-controlled school system providing
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universal, secular education was in existence, and the private
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(denominational, usually Anglican), state-added schools that
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constituted such a system as did exist not only failed to extend
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any educational training whatever, to more than half of the
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common people but did not make available even to the remainder a
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strictly secular education.
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
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Operative, in effect, primarily against the unprivileged
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classes were various obstructions and dangers to the free
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expression of opinion. There was, to begin with, the matter of
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free speech as exemplified at public meetings in the parks and
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other open spaces. Theoretically, the right to hold such meeting
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was assured. Actually, however, they were from time to time
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interfered with by the public authorities. The situation in
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regard to the freedom of the press, too, was not satisfactory.
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Though supposedly free, the press was subjected to restrictions
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which amounted to serious loss of liberty. For one thing, there
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||
were occasional instances of governmental interference with the
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right of publication. Then, too, indirect expedients were
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||
resorted to for regulating the press. Taxes were levied on
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newspapers, on advertisements, and on paper, and enactments --
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||
the so-called Security Laws -- calling upon newspapers to provide
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security against blasphemous or seditious utterances were
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||
sometimes invoked. Finally, various arrangements and regulations
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||
existed which prevented equality before the Law for all forms of
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speculative opinion. First, there were the provisions concerning
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oath-taking. As the situation stood, the taking of an oath
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ordinarily accompanied legal testimony. Quakers and other
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religious persons who had conscientious scruples against oath-
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taking were, however, allowed simply to make an affirmation. But
|
||
no such privilege was extended to the non-religious. These had
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either to take the oath or to lose the right to testify. Indeed,
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they might be deprived of the right of testimony even though
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willing to take the oath, if interested parties chose to have the
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state of their religious opinions brought to light. Secondly,
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there was a State Church -- a church endowed and supported by the
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state and therefore by the citizens as a whole irrespective of
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their religious beliefs or church affiliations. And thirdly,
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there was the situation as to blasphemy. What was called
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blasphemy was punishable as a crime, alike under a statute which
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had been enacted during the reign of William III and subsequently
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amended so as not to apply to the Unitarians, and under the
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common law. And in both cases blasphemy was narrowly conceived as
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a denial or reproach of the Christian religion regardless of the
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tone of such condemnation. Thus, the statute, as it now stood,
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declared as guilty of blasphemy "any person or persons having
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been educated in, or at any time having made profession of, the
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Christian religion within this realm who shall, by writing,
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printing, teaching, or advised speaking ... assert or maintain
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that there are more Gods than one, or shall deny the Christian
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doctrine to be true, or the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New
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Testament to be of divine authority"; and under the common law,
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according to the pronouncement (1675) of Lord Chief Justice Sir
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Matthew Hale, whose interpretation was still the generally
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accepted one, it was blasphemous "to speak in reproach of the
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Christian religion." It was true that no prosecution had ever
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taken place under the statute, but there was no assurance that
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such would always be the case; and under the common law numerous
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prosecutions down through the years had occurred.
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In the face of all these conditions a course of action
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looking to the promotion of mass welfare might logically have
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been undertaken by organized Christianity. As a matter of fact
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there were Churchmen here and there who engaged in such a task.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
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In the Church of England the "Christian Socialists" -- Maurice,
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Kingsley, and other -- expressed sympathy for the working classes
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and furthered industrial cooperation. And in the Nonconformist
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Churches there were undoubtedly active friends of such causes as
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democracy, social legislation, secular education, and Church
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disestablishment. But the Churches as organized bodies did not
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rise to the occasion; nor, for that matter, did the bulk of their
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responsible representatives as individuals. Officially and
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unofficially the tendency was to support the existing conditions.
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To this end, clergymen and prominent laymen (who themselves
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||
generally belonged to the middle and upper classes) expressed
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themselves in speeches, sermons, and publications. They not only
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||
propagated an otherworldly attitude calculated to divert
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attention from the hardships and injustices of this life, but
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||
made frequent use of biblical texts which were of a reactionary
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||
cast -- such texts as "The Powers that be are Ordained by God,"
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||
and "Meddle not with them that are given to change." As Professor
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||
Faulkner summed up the situation, "Organized Christianity
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||
deliberately refused the leadership in political and social
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||
reformation..." [Harold Underwood Faulkner, "Chartism and the
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Churches" (1916), pp. 119-120.] Thus, from the point of view of
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the working classes, the Church itself was objectionable.
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it was these conditions -- political, social, intellectual,
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and religious -- that produced not only the British Secular
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Movement but the many other reforming enterprises already
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referred to in these pages; and it was these conditions which
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inspired, in almost every case, persons who were both able and
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earnest to assume positions of leadership in such undertakings.
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Such a person was George Jacob Holyoake, the founder of the
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British Secular Movement, and, in the earliest years of the
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enterprise, the most conspicuous figure among the Secularists. A
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frail little man with weak eyes and a thin voice, Holyoake was
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nevertheless by nature a crusader. Yet, in his crusading efforts
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he ordinarily manifested pronounced courtesy and restraint
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towards opponents of his aims. In fact, his manner of dealing
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with persons in the opposite camp was so agreeable that they
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themselves often referred to it as praiseworthy. On the other
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hand, Holyoake was sharply critical of most of the Secular
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leaders, and at times even tended to side with "the enemy"
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against them. Especially was this the case after he ceased to be
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the controlling influence in the Secular Movement. Whatever the
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justification may have been for his attitude toward his
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colleagues, it was resented by them, all the more so because it
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stood out in contrast with his manner toward the opponentes of
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Secularism; and when he finally died they expressed little
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regret. Nevertheless, it would be erroneous to assume either that
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Holyoake did not possess superior personal qualities or that he
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was not of great value to the Secular Movement. His qualities as
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an individual, as we have already intimated, were of a high
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order. Perhaps Spencer placed a true estimate on them when he
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said: "Not dwelling upon his intellectual capacity, which is
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high, I would emphasize my appreciation of his courage,
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sincerity, truthfulness, philanthropy, and unwavering
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perseverance. Such a combination of qualities it will I think, be
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difficult to find." [Quoted in David Duncan, "Life and Letters of
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Herbert Spencer" (1908), p. 468.] As for Holyoake's services to
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Bank of Wisdom
|
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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5
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|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
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|
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the Secular Movement, though it is true that he was not
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altogether successful in his efforts at organizing and
|
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consolidating the enterprise, he gave the undertaking its initial
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impetus and played a truly important part in Secularist activity,
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especially in the earlier years of the Secular Movement, both as
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a forceful journalist and pamphleteer and (despite his physical
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handicaps) as an effective speaker. And his work in the Secular
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Movement was merely a part of what, from first to last, he was
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able to do. As we shall see, he lectured and wrote in the
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interest of Owenism, and was for a time one of the Chartist
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leaders. He rendered distinguished service as a champion and
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historian of the Cooperative Movement. He helped the Rationalist
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Press Association to get started. No one will deny that Holyoake
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served well the cause of popular reform.
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Holyoake was born at Birmingham on April 13, 1817. He early
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became conscious of the problem of poverty; for, though the wages
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of his father, who was an employee in a Birmingham foundry, were
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supplemented for a time by profits from a button-making shop
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operated by the boy's mother, the income of the family was
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scarcely sufficient for more than the bare necessities.
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Holyoake's father had "a pagan mind" and was indifferent to
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religion; but his mother was a woman of piety and imbued her son
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so effectively with religious fervor that he assiduously attended
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various nonconformist places of worship and was spoken of as the
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"angel child."
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The, educational training which Holyoake received was
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definitely limited. He attended a dame's school for a period, but
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was compelled to spend much of his time in a tinner's shop
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attaching handles to lanterns; and inasmuch as at the age of 9 he
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began a 13-year period of full-time work as a whitesmith in the
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foundry that employed his father, his opportunities for
|
||
educational pursuits became still more restricted. Nevertheless,
|
||
in 1833, he entered the Birmingham Mechanics' Institute, where he
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remained for five years, and where, through persistent night
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study, he made an impressive record.
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Certain of Holyoake's professors and fellow-students at the
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Mechanics' Institute were staunch disciples of Robert Owen, who,
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||
having abandoned the technique he originally followed of trying
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||
to achieve reform through the aid of upper-class persons, was now
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||
conducting one of his working class movements; and one of these
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||
academic associates of Holyoake, Frederick Hollick, a student,
|
||
endeavored to win Holyoake to the cause of Owenism, but was not
|
||
even able to persuade him to attend a single Owenite meeting. The
|
||
prospective convert did, however, attend such a meeting, though
|
||
most unintentionally. Upon hearing from his associates that a
|
||
clergyman whom he greatly admired, Robert Hall, was to speak on a
|
||
certain date, Holyoake put in an appearance, only to learn, to
|
||
his astonishment, that he had misunderstood the name of the
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||
speaker, who was not Robert Hall, but Robert Owen. Owen proved to
|
||
be less scandalizing than Holyoake had supposed, and the young
|
||
man, desiring to become better acquainted with Owenism so that he
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
might defend it against what he conceived to be the false
|
||
comments of certain of his friends, began to attend Owenite
|
||
meetings. The upshot was that in 1840 he definitely affiliated
|
||
himself with the Movement.
|
||
|
||
Early in 1839 Holyoake had abandoned his employment at the
|
||
Birmingham foundry. Later in the same year he had worked for a
|
||
brief period as a guide at an exhibition of machinery which was
|
||
being held at Birmingham. In the early autumn of 1839 he had
|
||
become an instructor at the Birmingham Mechanics' Institute, but
|
||
had surrendered his position under pressure, in January, 1840,
|
||
after having been denounced by religious persons for Owenite
|
||
leanings. In the course of the next few months he had taught in a
|
||
private school, served as bookkeeper for a venetian blind maker,
|
||
written advertisements, and given private lessons in mathematics.
|
||
At the time when he joined the Owenite Movement he was
|
||
unemployed, and he promptly began to devote his entire time to
|
||
its service.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake's experiences as one of the disciples of Robert
|
||
Owen were certainly not lacking in variety. At the outset he
|
||
accepted a lectureship with the Branch at Worcester. After he had
|
||
served in this capacity for several months, the Congress of 1841
|
||
appointed him "Station Lecturer" and sent him to take up his
|
||
duties at Sheffield. His services as lecturer were soon, however,
|
||
brought temporarily to a close, thanks to the interference of the
|
||
clergy with the Owenite Movement. Owen's plans for reform had
|
||
always met with a certain opposition from the clergy, but
|
||
beginning in 1846 their hostility took a new and more powerful
|
||
form, inasmuch as they now sought to strike at the Movement by
|
||
crippling its revenues. Seeing that the "Socialists," as the
|
||
Owenites were popularly called, took money at their meeting-house
|
||
doors on Sunday, they invoked Parliamentary legislation
|
||
forbidding any but religious bodies from doing so, and demanded
|
||
that the Owenite lecturers either desist or make profession, on
|
||
oath, of the Protestant religion. The Central Board of the
|
||
Movement favored making the declaration, and some of the
|
||
lecturers did so. Holyoake, however, along with certain others,
|
||
refused to take the oath. The result to Holyoake was that the
|
||
Owenite authorities requested and secured his resignation.
|
||
Inasmuch as at this time his fellow-Owenite, Charles Southwell,
|
||
who, with other followers of Owen, had defiantly started the
|
||
anti-theological Oracle of Reason, was in prison for a
|
||
provocative article he had written in the fourth number of that
|
||
paper, Holyoake took over the editorship of the periodical, and,
|
||
throwing off the last vestiges of his religious belief, carried
|
||
the paper forward in a militantly rationalist fashion. But he did
|
||
not do so for long, as he soon met a fate similar to that which
|
||
had befallen Southwell. Upon completing a lecture at Cheltenham
|
||
he was goaded by a clerical member of his audience into making
|
||
what was construed as a blasphemous remark, [Holyoake made the
|
||
remark upon being told that he had spoken of our duty to man but
|
||
had said nothing about our duty to God. His words were: "I appeal
|
||
to your heads and your pockets if we are not too poor to have a
|
||
God. If poor men cost the state so much, they would be put, like
|
||
officers, upon half pay. I think that while our distress lasts it
|
||
would be wise to do the same with the Deity."] and was
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
consequently compelled to serve a sentence of six months in the
|
||
Gloucester jail. After his release he was permitted to resume
|
||
lecturing -- at Worcester. But he soon went to London, where he
|
||
became Secretary to "Branch 53" and where, in December, 1843, he
|
||
founded, with his fellow-Owenite, M.Q. Ryall, the freethought
|
||
Movement. After 15 months the Movement failed, however, from an
|
||
inadequate circulation, and Holyoake accepted the post of
|
||
lecturer to the disciples of Owen in Glasgow. But he resigned
|
||
shortly afterwards and returned to London, where he founded, in
|
||
1846, the 'Reasoner' as an Owenite organ.
|
||
|
||
In the course of time Holyoake became dissatisfied with the
|
||
Owenite Movement as a medium for his activity. For one thing, the
|
||
enterprise assumed what he came to conceive as an unsatisfactory
|
||
character. When Holyoake joined the undertaking, it was partly
|
||
concerned with promoting the establishment of a network of
|
||
cooperative communities. But it was also, in some measure, an
|
||
ethical movement. Not only did it endeavor to imbue the public
|
||
with the social morality requisite to the introduction of the
|
||
utopian villages; it looked forward to the time when the ideal
|
||
neighborhoods would themselves provide an environment conducive
|
||
to the further improvement of morals. Finally, when Holyoake
|
||
became connected with the Owenite enterprise, the movement was in
|
||
an incidental way fighting the churches as forces impeding the
|
||
achievement of its aims. As the years passed, however, the
|
||
Owenite crusade took on an altered character. When the clergy
|
||
carried their opposition to Owenism to the point of interfering
|
||
with its revenue, the Movement began to devote pronounced
|
||
attention to anti-religious agitation. And when, in 1845,
|
||
Queenwood, the embodiment of one of the utopian communities to
|
||
which the Socialists looked forward, failed, blasting all hope
|
||
for an early achievement of their social goal, the Owenites
|
||
virtually allowed the community ideal to lapse, while at the same
|
||
time they permitted the ethical aspects of their program, with
|
||
which it was associated, to fall into the background; so that the
|
||
Movement became primarily an anti-religious endeavor. Now
|
||
Holyoake contributed to the altered character of the Socialist
|
||
enterprise, first by plunging into the freethought campaign and
|
||
later by abandoning the community ideal and its attendant ethical
|
||
program. Nevertheless, he came to feel that the modified program
|
||
was inadequate.
|
||
|
||
But there was another reason why Holyoake ceased to be
|
||
satisfied with the Owenite Movement. In the five or six years
|
||
following the abandonment of the Queenwood experiment, the
|
||
Movement declined alarmingly. It broke up into its constituent
|
||
bodies, and the individual societies either actually ceased to
|
||
exist or suffered a perilous thinning of their ranks.
|
||
|
||
As the Owenite Movement became less satisfactory, Holyoake
|
||
began to devote a good deal of attention to Chartism. For a good
|
||
many years he had been a Chartist in an incidental sort of way,
|
||
and now he became active in the Chartist cause. In 1848, for a
|
||
time, he served with W.J. Linton as coeditor of a short-lived
|
||
Chartist paper -- the Cause of the People -- and subsequently
|
||
served on the executive body of the Chartist Union. But organized
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Chartism itself turned out to be unsatisfactory. It, too, began
|
||
rapidly to decline, and, in addition, Holyoake fell into
|
||
disagreement with certain of the leaders over matters of policy.
|
||
|
||
Under this combination of circumstances Holyoake cast about
|
||
for new reformist opportunities. In doing so, though he naturally
|
||
borrowed from his past, he utilized not primarily his Chartist
|
||
experience (though Chartism, as we shall see, did influence one
|
||
item in the program he formulated), but his experience, with
|
||
Owenism. Here is the way he proceeded. Starting with the
|
||
realization that in its best days the Owenite Movement was
|
||
essentially an ethical and social enterprise and accordingly was
|
||
primarily constructive rather than critical in character, he
|
||
moved on to the conception that freethought itself had a positive
|
||
as well as a negative aspect -- that in fact it could serve as
|
||
the basis of a system of ethics under which the natural order of
|
||
the freethinker would be the proper sphere of ethical goals, and
|
||
the improvement of man's life here on earth by rational means the
|
||
sum and substance of man's duty.
|
||
|
||
The point of view that Holyoake thus hit upon satisfied him
|
||
as the thing he had felt the need of, and he determined to make
|
||
it the central impulse in a fresh start toward a powerful,
|
||
organized undertaking. Accordingly, giving it the name
|
||
"Secularism," rather than some anti-religions term, in order to
|
||
emphasize its constructive character, he took steps, at the end
|
||
of 1851, toward the inauguration of a new movement. In doing so,
|
||
he published a statement of the doctrines of Secularism,
|
||
announced the formation of a "Central Secular Society" in London,
|
||
the mission of which was the promotion of concerted action, and
|
||
invited persons desirous of forming, promoting, or constituting
|
||
Secular societies to communicate with the "Secretary" of the
|
||
Central Secular Society, in the person of himself.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake's action led to concrete results. In the course of
|
||
the year 1852, scattered "Owenite" societies, to which Holyoake
|
||
had long lectured, styled themselves "Secular" bodies, and
|
||
interested individuals formed Secular societies here and there;
|
||
so that the British Secular Movement was brought into existence.
|
||
[G.J. Holyoake, "Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life" (1892), I,
|
||
10-225; G.J. Holyoake, "Bygones Worth Remembering" (1905), I, 16
|
||
and 211-245; Joseph McCabe, "life and Letters of George Jacob
|
||
Holyoake" (1908) I, 1-118 and 211; "Reasoner," June 17, 1846, to
|
||
December 29, 1852, passim.]
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER II
|
||
|
||
A PERIOD OF FREE ASSOCIATION
|
||
|
||
BASIC FEATURES
|
||
|
||
In the period extending from 1852 to 1866 the organization
|
||
of the Secular Movement was incomplete. There were, of course,
|
||
the various organized local Secular societies, and there were, as
|
||
we shall see, certain factors which tended to bind the
|
||
Secularists together nationally in a psychological sense. But
|
||
there was no successful or enduring national organization. In
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
this respect the Secular Movement of these early years stood over
|
||
in contrast with organized Secularism in the decades that
|
||
followed. Such being the case it seems appropriate to discuss
|
||
this period of loose association as a unit in itself.
|
||
|
||
Because of Secularist dissension, the nature of which will
|
||
later be explained, every effort made during these early years in
|
||
the interest of a national union of Secularists ended in failure.
|
||
Nothing whatever in this direction was accomplished by the
|
||
"Central Secular Society," which soon disappeared from the scene.
|
||
Secularist Conferences, meeting in 1852, 1855, and 1860, were
|
||
able to establish respectively a "preliminary" constitution, a
|
||
"provisional" committee, and a "central" committee, but all these
|
||
proved abortive. A "Propagandist Committee," which was formed in
|
||
1856, and a "College of Propaganda," which was matured in 1857,
|
||
both faded out after simply offering a few suggestions. In 1861 a
|
||
"National Secular Association" was actually proclaimed; but it
|
||
never became operative, and after some three months it
|
||
disappeared in a cloud of bitterness. ["Reasoner," 1852-1857,
|
||
passim. "National Reformer," 1860-1862, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Though lacking a national organization, the early
|
||
Secularists were in some measure bound together. The "British
|
||
Secular Institute," a publishing and printing concern operated in
|
||
London by Holyoake, and spoken of by him as the Secularist
|
||
headquarters, was to a certain extent a unifying factor, as were
|
||
the periodical and other publications associated with the Secular
|
||
Movement. Then, too, the outstanding Secularist personalities,
|
||
such as Holyoake and Charles Bradlaugh, identified as they were
|
||
with the Secular Movement as a whole, were in some measure a
|
||
binding force. Above all, however, the Secularists were bound
|
||
together -- in so far as they were bound -- by their common
|
||
devotion to Secularist principles.
|
||
|
||
The various local societies were effectively organized. Each
|
||
had its body of elected officials. In general, there were the
|
||
President, Vice-President, Secretary, and Treasurer, along with a
|
||
Committee. A considerable number of these local Secular societies
|
||
existed. They were located in London, Manchester, Liverpool,
|
||
Birmingham, Leeds, Newcastle, Sheffield, Leicester, Edinburgh,
|
||
and other towns and cities in various parts of the country.
|
||
[NOTE: The following societies (and possibly others) were in
|
||
existence during a part or all of the early period of Secularist
|
||
history:
|
||
|
||
London societies: Deptford and Greenwich Secular Society;
|
||
East End Branch of the London Secular Society; East London
|
||
Secular Society; Frances Street Society; Hackney Hall Society;
|
||
Hoxton Class Room Society; Independent Secular Society; John
|
||
Street Branch of the London Secular Society; King's Cross secular
|
||
Society; London Secular Society; Marleybone and Paddington
|
||
Secular Society; North London Secular Institute; Paddington
|
||
Branch of the London Secular Society; Philpot Street Society; St,
|
||
George's Hall Society; South london Institute: Temple, Secular
|
||
Society; West End Branch of the London Secular Society; Woolwich
|
||
Branch of the London Secular Society.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Provincial societies: Abergavenny Secular Society; Ashton-
|
||
under-Lyne Secular Society; Bedlington Secular Society;
|
||
Birmingham Secular Society; Blackburn Secular Society; Bolton
|
||
Secular Society; Bradford Secular Society; Brighton Secular
|
||
Society; Bristol Secular Society; Burnley Branch of the Secular
|
||
Society; Bury Secular Society; Colne Branch of the Secular
|
||
Society; Dewsbury Secular Association; Doncastle Secular Society;
|
||
Durham Secular Society; Edinburgh Secular Society; Huddersfield
|
||
Secular Society; Hull Secularist Society; Keighley Secular
|
||
Society; leeds Secular Society; Leicester Secular Society; Leigh
|
||
Secular Society; Liverpool Secular Society; Manchester Secular
|
||
Society; Newcastle Secular Society; Northampton Secular Society;
|
||
Nottingham Secular Society; Oldham Secular Society; Over Darwen
|
||
Secular Society; Plymouth and Devenport Secular Society; Preston
|
||
Society; Redditch Secular Society; Rochdale Secular Society;
|
||
Sheffield Secular Association; Stafford Society; Stepney Society;
|
||
Sunderland Secular Society; Todmorden Secular Society; Wigin
|
||
Secular Society; Yarmouth Secular Society. "Reasoner," passim;
|
||
"National Reformers," passim; "Investigator," passim.]
|
||
|
||
A set or doctrines for the early Secularists was proclaimed
|
||
by Holyoake, as we have seen, when he announced the formation of
|
||
the "Central Secular Society and urged the founding of a network
|
||
of local Secular bodies in affiliation with it. Inasmuch as it
|
||
was in response to this utterance, and the announcement and
|
||
invitation accompanying it, that bodies calling themselves
|
||
"Secular" societies sprang into existence, the statement may be
|
||
accepted as an expression of the views held by the early
|
||
Secularists,
|
||
|
||
The "Principle" of the society is defined as "the
|
||
recognition of the 'Secular' sphere as the province of man," and
|
||
its "Aims" are said to be:
|
||
|
||
"1. To explain that science is the sole Providence of Man --
|
||
a truth which is calculated to enable a man to become master of
|
||
his own Fate, and protects him from dependencies that allure him
|
||
from his duty, unnerve his arm in difficulty, and betray him in
|
||
danger.
|
||
|
||
"2. To establish the proposition that Morals are independent
|
||
of Christianity; in other words, to show that wherever there is a
|
||
moral end proposed, there is a secular path to it.
|
||
|
||
"3. To encourage men to trust Reason throughout, and to
|
||
trust nothing that Reason does not establish -- to examine all
|
||
things hopeful, respect all things probable, but rely upon
|
||
nothing without precaution which does not come within the range
|
||
of science and experience.
|
||
|
||
"4. To teach men that the universal fair and open discussion
|
||
of opinion is the highest guarantee of public truth -- that only
|
||
that theory which is submitted to that ordeal is to be regarded,
|
||
since only that which endures it can be trusted.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"5, To claim for every man the fullest liberty of thought
|
||
and action compatible with the possession of like liberty by
|
||
every other person.
|
||
|
||
"6. To maintain -- that, from the uncertainty as to whether
|
||
the inequalities of human condition will be compensated for in
|
||
another life -- It is the business of intelligence to rectify
|
||
them in this world; and consequently, that instead of indulging
|
||
in speculative worship of supposed superior beings, a generous
|
||
man will devote himself to the patient service of known inferior
|
||
natures, and the mitigation of harsh destiny, so that the
|
||
ignorant may be enlightened and the low elevated." [G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "Organization of Freethinkers" (1852)]
|
||
|
||
From what has been said earlier in these pages, it will be
|
||
observed that the foregoing program had its roots in the
|
||
organized movement founded by Robert Owen, and that it basically
|
||
resembled the philosophy of Owenism in being essentially ethical
|
||
in character and having for its purpose the improvement of man's
|
||
well-being on earth by natural means.
|
||
|
||
While Secularism was indebted primarily to the Owenite
|
||
Movement, its conception of morality owed something to
|
||
Utilitarianism, Thanks largely to the efforts of James Mill and
|
||
others, notably John Stuart Mill, the Benthamite doctrine that
|
||
all behavior is moral which is conducive to "the greatest
|
||
happiness of the greatest number" had created a considerable stir
|
||
by the time of the founding of the Secularist Movement, and
|
||
Holyoake was one of those who had felt its influence, as is
|
||
indicated by the fact that from 1846 to 1848 he published a
|
||
"Utilitarian Record" in connection with the Reasoner. In
|
||
recognition of the debt of Secularism to Utilitarianism,
|
||
Holyoake, at the end of 1851, referred to the persons composing
|
||
the "Central Secular Society" as "Utilitarians." ["Reasoner,"
|
||
1846-1848 and January 14, 1852.]
|
||
|
||
Despite the striking similarity between the fundamental
|
||
Secularist doctrines and Auguste Comte's conception of a
|
||
positive, or scientific, morality devoted to the promotion of
|
||
human progress on earth, Secularism apparently owes nothing
|
||
directly to Comte. Holyoake seems to have gained a first-hand
|
||
acquaintanceship with Comte's writings, from "the early sheets"
|
||
of Harriet Martineau's condensed English version of Comte's Cours
|
||
de philosophie positive, in 1853 -- several months after the
|
||
launching of the Secular Movement. In an indirect sense, Holyoake
|
||
may have owed something to Positivism, inasmuch as Positivist
|
||
ideas (unacknowledged as Comte's) were circulating in England
|
||
when Secularism was being worked out. Holyoake's reference to the
|
||
subject, in May, 1853, when he announced the forthcoming
|
||
publication of Miss Martineau's treatise, is suggestive. "I find
|
||
Comte's ideas," he says, "cropping up wherever I look on the
|
||
surface of our field of knowledge; but it is a rare thing to hear
|
||
his name. It is time that there should be an end to this. The
|
||
book and the man are too remarkable to be ignored; and we should
|
||
decline the shame of benefiting by his ideas, and taking the
|
||
credit of them." ["Reasoner," May 25, 1853. See also the
|
||
"Reasoner" for November 2, 1853.] Whatever the facts may be as
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
to Holyoake's indebtedness to the Positive philosophy, he freely
|
||
acknowledged the similarity between Secularism and Positivism, In
|
||
November, 1853, when announcing the appearance of the Martineau
|
||
volumes, he declared, "The 'Positive Philosophy of M. Comte' is
|
||
... a scientific Bible of Secularism." [Ibid., November 30,
|
||
1853.] And from July 6, 1856, to December 30, 1857, he used as a
|
||
subtitle for the Reasoner, which, as we shall see, he was then
|
||
editing as a Secularist periodical, the words "Journal of
|
||
Freethought and Positive Philosophy." [Ibid., for period
|
||
mentioned.]
|
||
|
||
A MASTERFUL CONVERT
|
||
|
||
Almost at the outset organized Secularism attracted to its
|
||
banner a man who was of profound significance both in shaping the
|
||
policy of the Secular Movement and in furthering its aims.
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh was indeed a powerful and impressive figure.
|
||
Large in stature, big-boned, and solidly built, be possessed, in
|
||
his best years, such amazing physical strength that he could
|
||
grapple successfully with three or four ordinary men. He had,
|
||
too, a rather large head, solemn, resolute features, and a
|
||
strong, masculine voice. Sincerity, earnestness, and strength of
|
||
character shone in his face, and his mind, though not original,
|
||
was a keen one. Combined in him with these characteristics and
|
||
qualities were a strong dislike for oppression, obscurantism, and
|
||
intolerance, and an unwavering sympathy for the downtrodden
|
||
masses. At the same, time, he possessed distinguished qualities
|
||
of leadership, and was a truly great orator. In fact, his
|
||
oratorical ability was probably greater than that of any of his
|
||
contemporaries with the exception of Gladstone. Under favorable
|
||
conditions he could sway an audience almost at will, arousing in
|
||
it the wildest enthusiasm for whatever he was advocating. As a
|
||
statesman and Member of Parliament, too, Bradlaugh was
|
||
distinguished, not merely because of his actual legislative
|
||
achievements, but because of his integrity and his almost
|
||
unbelievable industry; and the House of Commons, which for more
|
||
than five years refused to permit him to take his seat,
|
||
eventually expunged its exclusion proceedings from the record.
|
||
Bradlaugh's great powers of oratory, his simple sincerity, and
|
||
his talents as a leader gave him a hold upon his followers such
|
||
as few men have ever had. Many ordinary workmen not distinguished
|
||
for courage or bravery stood ready, if need be, to risk life and
|
||
limb for him, and on more than one occasion might have done so
|
||
had they not been restrained by Secularist leaders. Yet,
|
||
Bradlaugh was no demagogue, but a conscientious exponent of what
|
||
he believed to be genuine reform. And it should not be overlooked
|
||
(despite opinions to the contrary) that in his advocacy of reform
|
||
he followed a constructive as well as a destructive course,
|
||
promoting the positive principles of Secularism as well as
|
||
engaging in negative criticism. Indeed, if the phrase "Bradlaugh
|
||
the Iconoclast" might be correctly applied to him, he might just
|
||
as properly be designated as "Bradlaugh the Republican," or
|
||
"Bradlaugh the Educational Reformer," or "Bradlaugh, Friend of
|
||
the Masses," or, as was done a few years ago by some of his
|
||
admirers, "Bradlaugh, Champion of Liberty." [Centenary
|
||
Committee, "Champion of Liberty: Charles Bradlaugh" (1933).] It
|
||
is not strange that, in the light of such an extraordinary array
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
of qualities and interests, Gladstone described Bradlaugh as "a
|
||
distinguished man," [Quoted in John Morley, "Life of William
|
||
Ewart Gladstone" (1903), III, 21.] or that Bernard Shaw declared
|
||
of him, "He was a hero, a giant who dwarfed everything around
|
||
him, a terrific personality." [Quoted in Centenary Committee,
|
||
"Champion of Liberty: Charles Bradlaugh" (1933), P. 50.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
The son of a law clerk who married a nursemaid, Bradlaugh
|
||
was born in impoverished circumstances on September 26, 1833, in
|
||
Hoxton, London. His formal schooling came to an end when he was
|
||
but 11 years of age, and the education that he subsequently
|
||
received was secured through his own unaided efforts. Shortly
|
||
after leaving school Bradlaugh obtained work as an office boy at
|
||
the law offices where his father was employed; but, at the age of
|
||
14, he procured more lucrative employment as wharf clerk and
|
||
cashier with a firm of coal merchants.
|
||
|
||
The boy's religious evolution was, to say the least, an
|
||
impassioned one. At the Church of St. Peter's, in Hackney Road,
|
||
where the Rev. John Graham Packer was the incumbent, young
|
||
Bradlaugh started out as an eagerly responsive pupil, and soon
|
||
became a, Sunday-school teacher. Difficulties, however, arose. In
|
||
studying, at Packer's request, the Thirty-nine Articles of the
|
||
Church of England and the four Gospels, in anticipation of being
|
||
confirmed by the Bishop of London, the young scholar found
|
||
discrepancies which troubled him. He asked for advice and
|
||
assistance in the matter from the Rev. Packer, but Packer,
|
||
instead of aiding the boy, wrote a letter to Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
Senior, denouncing his son's inquiries as atheistical, and then
|
||
suspended young Bradlaugh for three months from his duties as
|
||
teacher. In the midst of his religious perplexities Bradlaugh
|
||
began, in 1848, to visit open-air meetings in Bonner's Fields,
|
||
where anti-theological discourses were delivered and discussed.
|
||
At first he replied to speakers with arguments in support of
|
||
Christianity; but in time he came to admit that his opponents
|
||
made out the best case, and ultimately began to give freethought
|
||
lectures himself.
|
||
|
||
While still doubtful on certain points concerning religion,
|
||
Bradlaugh sent to Packer a copy of Robert Taylor's Diegesis.
|
||
Whereupon, in conjunction with the boy's father, Packer informed
|
||
the young heretic that unless he recanted within three days the
|
||
clergyman and the father would have him deprived of his situation
|
||
at the coal dealer's establishment. Believing, rightly or
|
||
wrongly, that the threat would be carried out, Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
Junior, on the third day, packed his few belongings and left both
|
||
his employment and his home.
|
||
|
||
For several months young Bradlaugh endeavored to earn a
|
||
living by selling first coal and then braces, but finding himself
|
||
unable to do so he enlisted in the 7th Dragoon Guards and was
|
||
sent to Ireland. He grew tired of army life, however, and in
|
||
1853, he used a portion of a legacy from his great-aunt to
|
||
purchase his release. Upon returning to London, the ex-soldier
|
||
obtained work from a solicitor, originally as an errand boy and
|
||
later as a clerk.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
As a result of his activities in connection with open-air
|
||
freethought meetings in the period before he joined the army,
|
||
Bradlaugh had met and become a friend of Holyoake's brother,
|
||
Austin, and through him had made the acquaintance of the more
|
||
widely-known George Jacob. Now that he was a civilian once more
|
||
his propagandist impulses again had an opportunity to assert
|
||
themselves; and, recalling the old days, he moved in the
|
||
direction of these men. Finding at hand the newly-begun Secular
|
||
Movement, with which they were identified, he took his place in
|
||
its ranks.
|
||
|
||
For a period of about 16 years, Bradlaugh's services to the
|
||
Movement were usually on a part-time basis; but finally,
|
||
beginning in 1870, after a number of disappointing connections as
|
||
a law clerk and business associate, he devoted undivided
|
||
attention to the cause for a prolonged period.
|
||
|
||
In the earlier stages of his Secularist career Bradlaugh
|
||
wrote and spoke as "Iconoclast." He began publicly to use his
|
||
true name upon becoming a candidate for parliament in 1868.
|
||
[Hypitia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894). I, 1-301;
|
||
J.M. Robertson, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1920), pp. 1-20; A.S.
|
||
Headingley, "Biography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 1-132;
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh, "Autobiography', (1873), pp. 1-9.]
|
||
|
||
LITERATURE
|
||
|
||
The early Secularists endeavored to further their cause by
|
||
issuing and distributing various publications. Their activities
|
||
in this direction included, for one thing, the patting out of a
|
||
number of periodicals. The first of these in the field was the
|
||
Reasoner, which, as has been seen, was founded by Holyoake in
|
||
1846 as a journal of Owenism. Holyoake's changing outlook in the
|
||
period from 1846 to the end of 1851 was paralleled by a
|
||
corresponding change in the character of the Reasoner, so that
|
||
when the Secular Movement got under way in 1852 the paper easily
|
||
took its place as a Secularist organ. As such, under the
|
||
continued editorship of Holyoake, it placed primary emphasis upon
|
||
the direct propagation of Secularist principles, although
|
||
articles often appeared in its pages condemning theological ideas
|
||
and institutions as the major impediments to Secularism. The
|
||
Reasoner was issued weekly. In 1861, because of financial
|
||
difficulties, it went out of existence. ["Reasoner," all
|
||
numbers.]
|
||
|
||
The second periodical to make its appearance within the
|
||
Secularist Movement was the 'Investigator,' which was founded in
|
||
1854. Edited successively by Robert Cooper, who had gone through
|
||
the Owenite Movement, "Anthony Collins" (W.H. Johnson), and
|
||
Bradlaugh, the Investigator devoted primary attention to
|
||
attacking the Churches, on the ground of their constituting the
|
||
most formidable barriers to Secularism. The paper was issued once
|
||
a month until March, 1859, after which it appeared twice monthly.
|
||
From the first to last financial losses were incurred in the
|
||
conduct of the journal, and in 1859 it ceased to exist.
|
||
["Investigator," all number.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
The year 1860 saw the inauguration of the National Reformer,
|
||
a weekly journal which was destined to serve the Secularist cause
|
||
for more than 30 years. Although Bradlaugh founded the paper, he
|
||
was at first simply the largest shareholder, inasmuch as he
|
||
launched the enterprise through the formation of a joint-stock
|
||
company; but when, in 1862, as a result of financial
|
||
difficulties, the company was liquidated, he assumed complete
|
||
financial responsibility. The editorship of the National Reformer
|
||
was in the beginning shared by Bradlaugh and Joseph Barker, a
|
||
forceful ex-clergyman, but between the two men there speedily
|
||
arose bitter antagonism -- centering in the dislike which Barker
|
||
felt for Bradlaugh's advocacy of birth control -- which
|
||
threatened the interests of the journal and suggested the
|
||
desirability of a single editor. In consequence, the
|
||
shareholders, on August 26, 1861, dismissed both coeditors and
|
||
then bestowed the editorship solely on Bradlaugh, In 1863, when
|
||
beset by ill health, Bradlaugh turned over the editorship to his
|
||
sub-editor, John Watts, but in 1866, when the health of Watts
|
||
broke down, he took over the editorial duties again. The National
|
||
Reformer strove directly to advance the principles of Secularism,
|
||
but it did more; it fought indirectly for the Secularist cause by
|
||
waging continuous warfare against organized theology as the chief
|
||
obstacle that stood in the way of Secularism. ["National
|
||
Reformer," all numbers.]
|
||
|
||
Still other periodicals appeared on the scene. In 1861 the
|
||
'Counsellor,' a monthly journal similar to the Reasoner, was
|
||
started by Holyoake; but upon the completion, near the end of
|
||
1861, of an arrangement by which Holyoake was to furnish three
|
||
pages of copy each week to the 'National Reformer the newly-
|
||
founded paper was brought to a close. ["Counsellor," all numbers;
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh, "Secular Prospects," "National Reformer,"
|
||
November 16, 1861.]
|
||
|
||
In 1863 another paper was launched by Holyoake, the
|
||
undertaking being occasioned by the termination of the
|
||
arrangement by which Holyoake was to supply copy for the National
|
||
Reformer. The new periodical, which followed along the lines of
|
||
the Reasoner and the Counsellor, bore the name at first of the
|
||
'Secular World' and subsequently of the 'Reasoner.' It appeared
|
||
at varying intervals and came to an end after only about two
|
||
years of apparently impoverished existence." [The conditions
|
||
under which the arrangement between Holyoake and the "National
|
||
Reformer," were brought to an end are not clear.
|
||
"National Reformer," March 8, 1862, to September 26, 1863,
|
||
passim; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob
|
||
Holyoake" (1908), 1, 343-344; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), 1, 129-130; G.J. Holyoake, "Warpath of
|
||
Opinion" (189?), pp. 21-26.]
|
||
|
||
Besides bringing out periodical literature, the early
|
||
Secularists published great numbers of books and pamphlets. These
|
||
included works enunciating Secularist principles and treatises
|
||
containing doctrines of an anti-theological character. The books
|
||
and pamphlets which the Secularists published were ordinarily
|
||
written by persons within the Secularist Movement, but from time
|
||
to time masterpieces were issued which were from the pens of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
other secular-minded writers. A number of the Secularist
|
||
publications will be mentioned in connection with our discussion
|
||
of the propagandist activity carried on by the Secularists. [For
|
||
typical references to Secularist efforts in producing and
|
||
disseminating books and pamphlets see the "Reasoner December 7,
|
||
1853, and the "Investigator," October 1, 1858.]
|
||
|
||
Various concerns for the sale, or the printing and sale, of
|
||
literature considered helpful to the secularist cause were
|
||
operated in London by Secularists of the early years. At the
|
||
outset a publishing firm was conducted by the veteran reformer
|
||
James Watson. In the spring of 1853 Holyoake set up a news and
|
||
book agency, and later in the same year made an arrangement with
|
||
Watson through which Watson retired from business and Holyoake
|
||
purchased the Watson concern. The two businesses were now merged
|
||
by Holyoake into a book-selling and publishing enterprise at 147
|
||
Fleet Street -- a pretentious establishment usually referred to
|
||
as the "Fleet Street House." The venture was not financially
|
||
successful, however, despite assistance from numerous
|
||
Secularists, and in 1861 was terminated. During the remaining
|
||
years of the early period of Secularist history Holyoake's
|
||
brother, Austin, who had been connected with the Fleet Street
|
||
House, carried on a printing and publishing business, under the
|
||
name of "Austin and Company" ["Reasoner," May 11, 1853 - May 19,
|
||
1861, passim; William Kent, "London for Heretics" (1932), pp.
|
||
72-73; George Sexton, "John Watts," "National Reformer," November
|
||
11, 1866.
|
||
|
||
The publishing and book-selling establishment conducted by
|
||
G.J. Holyoake at 147 Fleet Street, and referred to by him at one
|
||
time or another as the "Fleet Street Secular Institution" or the
|
||
"British. Secular Institute" on the ground that it served as a
|
||
center of Secularist propaganda, evoked criticism from various
|
||
Secularists as being operated ostensibly in the interest of the
|
||
Secularist cause but actually for private gain. "Reasoner," May
|
||
11, 1853 - May, 19, 1861, passim; " Investigator," November, 1857
|
||
- June 16, 1858, passim; Charles Bradlaugh, "Freethought
|
||
Propaganda," "National Reformer." August 30, 1862; Joseph McCabe,
|
||
"Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake (1908), passim; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life" (1892), II,
|
||
160-166; G.J. Holyoake, "English Secularism" (1896), p. 51.]
|
||
|
||
ASSEMBLAGES
|
||
|
||
The aims of the early Secularists were fostered likewise by
|
||
oral means. These took the form simply of meetings of one sort or
|
||
another. There were, to begin with, regular Sunday meetings in
|
||
the Secularist halls. Each of these exercises began with a
|
||
lecture and ended with a free-for-all discussion -- often an
|
||
animated one -- of the lecture. In discussing the various phases
|
||
of the Secular Program, the Secularist lectures really ranged
|
||
over a wide variety of subjects, including morals, public
|
||
affairs, biography, history, and science. This is abundantly
|
||
clear from the titles they selected, a few of which are: "The
|
||
Nature of Secularism and the Duties of Secularists"; "The Reform
|
||
Bill, Judged from the, Secular Stand-point"; "Women's Right to
|
||
the Franchise"; "Poverty and Its Relation to the Political
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Condition of the People"; "The Sunday, What It is and What It
|
||
Might Be"; "A Plea for Secular Education"; "Free Enquiry and Free
|
||
Speech"; "Life and Character of Thomas Paine"; "The New
|
||
Testament, Who Wrote It and What It Is Worth"; and "Science, the
|
||
Providence of Life." Among the Secularists who took a prominent
|
||
part in the work of lecturing at these meetings were the
|
||
following: Charles Bradlaugh, G.J. Holyoake, Mrs. Harriet Law,
|
||
John Maughan, and John Watts. Often the lectures at the meetings
|
||
were delivered by local speakers of the various societies; but
|
||
sometimes an interchange of lecturers was effected between
|
||
societies, and frequently such better-known London speakers as
|
||
Holyoake and Bradlaugh went on lecturing tours to the various
|
||
societies or prospective societies throughout the country."
|
||
|
||
There were also meetings centering in debates. Public
|
||
discussions between Secularists and persons who rejected the
|
||
principles of Secularism were persistently sought by Secularist
|
||
leaders; and, while Secularist challenges to debate were usually
|
||
ignored (especially by individuals in positions of high
|
||
authority), a considerable number of debates were held, Those who
|
||
debated with the Secularists were usually clergymen, though such
|
||
was by no means always the case. Among the Secularists who
|
||
participated in the debates were Charles Bradlaugh (who easily
|
||
outdistanced other Secularists in respect to the number of
|
||
debates engaged in), Robert Cooper, G.J. Holyoake, and John
|
||
Watts. Those who took part in debate against the Secularists
|
||
included the Rev. W. Barker; the Rev. Joseph Baylee; the Rev. Dr.
|
||
Brindley; Mr. Court, representing the Glasgow Protestant
|
||
Association; Thomas Cooper, an ex-freethinking "Lecturer on
|
||
Christianity"; the Rev. Brewin Grant; W. Hutchins, the subeditor
|
||
of the Wigan Examiner; the Rev. T. Lawson; Mr. Mackie, editor of
|
||
the Warrington Guardian; Robert Maholm, a representative of the
|
||
Irish Church Mission at Birmingham; the Rev. T.D. Matthias; the
|
||
Rev. J. Sinclair; Mr. Smart, a teacher at the Neilson Institute
|
||
in Paisley; and the Rev. Woodville Woodman. The Secularist
|
||
debates ordinarily hinged upon the question of the merit of
|
||
Secularism, or the merit of Christianity, or the relative merit
|
||
of Secularism and Christianity. Such titles as: "Is Secularism
|
||
inconsistent with Reason and the Moral Sense, and condemned by
|
||
experience?" and "Are the doctrines and precepts of Christianity,
|
||
as taught in the New Testament, calculated to benefit humanity?"
|
||
and "Whether is Christianity or Secularism best calculated to
|
||
promote human happiness?" are typical. Though many of the debates
|
||
were one-night affairs, some lasted four, five, or even six
|
||
nights. Secularist debates attracted much attention, as they were
|
||
often lively occasions. Large crowds were frequently in
|
||
attendance, and Holyoake tells us that a published report of a
|
||
debate held at London in 1853 between himself and the Rev. Brewin
|
||
Grant sold to the number of 45,900 copies." [G. J. Holyoake,
|
||
"English Secularism" (1896), p. 50. For examples of debates in
|
||
the earlier years of the Secular Movement see the following: G.J.
|
||
Holyoake and the Rev. Brewin Grant, "Discussion on Secularism'
|
||
(1854); Charles Bradlaugh and the Rev. T. Lawson, "Discussion on
|
||
the Question, Has Man A Soul?" (1861); and J.P. Adams,
|
||
"Discussion Between the Rev. J. Sinclair and Mr. J. Watts,"
|
||
"National Reformer," May 15, 1862. Many references to debates
|
||
appear in Secularist periodicals of the period, especially in the
|
||
"Reasoner."]
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Finally, during the mild seasons of the year a few open-air
|
||
meetings were held by the early Secularists in parks or other
|
||
unoccupied spaces of London and one or two other cities. On such
|
||
occasions a Secularist speaker delivered a discourse and engaged
|
||
in controversy with challengers. The Secularist outdoor meetings
|
||
were held on the strength of the belief that persons who would
|
||
object to entering a Secular hall would listen to Secularist
|
||
messages uttered in a square or field. The persons who conducted
|
||
the outdoor meetings were minor lecturers in the Secular
|
||
Movement. [See issues of the "Reasoner" and of the "National
|
||
Reformer" published during the early period of the Secularist
|
||
Movement for references to outdoor meeting. Examples of such
|
||
references are: "Reasoner," September 17, 1854, and "National
|
||
Reformer," June 16,1860.]
|
||
|
||
ADVANCING SECULARIST DOCTRINES
|
||
|
||
The Secularists of the early years carried on a persistent
|
||
campaign for the purpose of promoting the diffusion and
|
||
application of Secularist principles. For one thing, they
|
||
endeavored assiduously to promote a wide acceptance of the
|
||
doctrines indispensably associated with Secularism as a
|
||
philosophy. Carrying on in this respect a work similar to the
|
||
strictly ethical labors of the Utilitarians, the Owenites, and
|
||
the English Positivists, they frequently asserted, on the
|
||
platform and in articles and pamphlets, that it is man's duty to
|
||
promote the well-being of man upon earth; that, indeed, the very
|
||
essence of morality is the improvement of human conditions in the
|
||
present life; and that such improvement is possible only by
|
||
natural means. [See, as examples, the following: G.J. Holyoake,
|
||
"Secularism, the Practical Philosophy of the People" (1854);
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh. "Secularism," "National Reformer," August 24,
|
||
1861; and John Watts, "Secularism and Christianity," "National
|
||
Reformer," March 26, 1864.]
|
||
|
||
The propagation of Secularism as a conception by no means
|
||
exhausted the activity of the Secularists in the early years of
|
||
the Secular Movement. In fact, it constituted a small portion of
|
||
their endeavors. Not content with talking in general terms about
|
||
the advancement of human happiness, they sought to promote the
|
||
welfare of themselves and their fellows by working for the
|
||
achievement of specific goals in various departments of life.
|
||
They possessed, it is true, no synthetic scheme for the complete
|
||
organization of society in all its parts; but they did occupy
|
||
themselves with the improvement of various aspects of the social
|
||
order.
|
||
|
||
One of the things they did was to advocate governmental
|
||
reform. The arrangement by which the middle and upper classes of
|
||
the period, through the retention of hereditary elements in the
|
||
government and the exclusion of the majority from participation
|
||
in the suffrage, controlled matters essentially in their own
|
||
interests, was unsatisfactory to the Secularists, inasmuch as
|
||
they were among the despoiled. Under these circumstances
|
||
Secularist speakers and writers carried on a two-fold agitation.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
In the first place they embraced the tradition associated
|
||
most conspicuously with Thomas Paine and the French Revolution
|
||
and advocated the removal from the government of hereditary
|
||
institutions and the establishment of a, republic -- encouraged
|
||
in their effort, no doubt, by the inglorious reputation of the
|
||
first four Georges, by the popular apathy toward Queen Victoria
|
||
growing out of the Queen's secluded manner of living in the years
|
||
following the death (1861) of the prince consort, and by the
|
||
hatred of English liberals for the French Emperor Napoleon III.
|
||
Bradlaugh took the lead in the Secularist republican agitation,
|
||
and he condemned the undemocratic monarchy in no uncertain terms:
|
||
|
||
"We attack the Crown," he declared, "because, denying
|
||
hereditary rights to monarchs, we contend that the chief of a
|
||
nation should be voluntarily elected by the nation, and that the
|
||
national chieftainship should not be considered as a family
|
||
heritage. We affirm that the people form the only rightful source
|
||
of any authority, and that no monarch can be entitled to wield
|
||
any authority which is not derived from the people.
|
||
|
||
"We declare that any prince governing a nation without
|
||
having had the reins of government entrusted to him by the will
|
||
of the people, is a usurper of the nation's power. We attack the
|
||
Crown as long as it makes a pretense to exist 'by the Grace of
|
||
God,' instead of by the desire of the nation. [Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
"Our Politics," "National Reformer," May 6, 1866. See also the
|
||
following: G.J. Holyoake, "Warpath of Opinion" (189?) pp. 73-74;
|
||
J.M. Robertson, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1920), pp. 36-37; Geoffrey
|
||
Dennis, "Coronation Commentary" (1937), pp. 13-16.]
|
||
|
||
At the same time, combining the doctrine of manhood
|
||
suffrage, which had come down from the 18th century and which had
|
||
found a place in the program of the Chartists (with whom Holyoake
|
||
had been associated), with the doctrine of woman suffrage, which
|
||
itself was an 18th century product, leading Secularists labored
|
||
to secure the vote for all mature persons without regard to sex.
|
||
To this end they gave aid, for one thing, to societies interested
|
||
in a less-thoroughgoing extension of the franchise than that
|
||
favored by the Secularists. In this connection, Holyoake served
|
||
on the executive council of the National Parliamentary and
|
||
Financial Reform Association, and both Holyoake and Bradlaugh, at
|
||
still later dates, not only supported the Northern Reform Union
|
||
but served as offerers in the National Reform League. Along with
|
||
all this, the Secularists were in some measure active under their
|
||
own banner. Bradlaugh, Holyoake, and Mrs. Harriet Law all wrote
|
||
and spoke on the subject (or some phase of it), and Holyoake, as
|
||
a special aid to the claims of women in the matter, issued as a
|
||
pamphlet Mrs. John Stuart Mill's articles entitled "Are Women Fit
|
||
for Politics?" and "Are Politics Fit for Women?" ["Reasoner,"
|
||
March 10, 1853, April 24, 1856, and March 3, 1857; Joseph McCabe,
|
||
"life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 12;
|
||
Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 120 and
|
||
128, and II (by J.M, Robertson), 168-169; J.M. Robertson,
|
||
"Charles Bradlaugh" (1920), pp. 36-37; G.J. Holyoake, "Sixty
|
||
Years of an Agitator's Life" (1892), I, 225; G.J. Holyoake,
|
||
"Working Class Representation: Its Conditions and Consequences"
|
||
(1868), p. 3.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
In 1958 Holyoake, took up a position somewhat at variance
|
||
with that indicated above. He came out in favor of an
|
||
"intelligence franchise" which would be extended to those men and
|
||
women who had passed a public examination in political economy
|
||
and English constitutional history. Holyoake's proposal was
|
||
endorsed, among the Secularists, by Joseph Barker. "Reasoner,"
|
||
December 12, 1858, and March 4, 1860; Joseph Baker, "The Fitness
|
||
Franchise," "National Reformer," May 12, 1860.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake manifested an interest, inherited from Robert Owen,
|
||
in women's rights in general. As early as 1847 he suggested the
|
||
desirability of systematic Feminist agitation by women, and in
|
||
the course of the early period of Secularist history he
|
||
occasionally wrote and spoke in advocacy of the rights of women.
|
||
Mrs. Harriet Law also advocated women's rights. "Reasoner,"
|
||
August 11, 1847, November 16, 1856, and May 31, June 7, June 14,
|
||
and June 21, 1857; John Watts, "Freethought in England,"
|
||
"National Reformer," November 5, 1964.]
|
||
|
||
The early Secularists were also active in the reform of
|
||
living conditions among the toiling masses. As laborers they were
|
||
greatly distressed by the poverty, insecurity, and monotony which
|
||
characterized the lives of the working masses of that day, and
|
||
they sought to effect an improvement.
|
||
|
||
In this connection, one of the things they undertook to
|
||
achieve was a "free and rational use of the Sunday," to the end
|
||
that those whose work kept them occupied for six days in the week
|
||
might not be prevented from securing needed recreation and
|
||
enlightenment on the one day of leisure, In their work of
|
||
broadening the use of the Sunday the Secularists exerted
|
||
themselves both as Secularists and as supporters of the National
|
||
Sunday League, which shared their aims in regard to the enlarged
|
||
use of the Sunday.
|
||
|
||
One way in which the Secularists endeavored to make the
|
||
Sunday more helpful to those who toiled was by an effort to
|
||
procure the opening on that day of such institutions of public
|
||
enlightenment and recreation as art galleries, museums, and
|
||
libraries. They wrote and spoke on the subject and on three
|
||
occasions sent petitions to Parliament for the opening on Sunday
|
||
of the British Museum, Crystal Palace, the National Gallery, and
|
||
similar buildings. ["Reasoner," December 22, 1852, to May 13,
|
||
1855, passim; G.J. Holyoake, "Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life"
|
||
(1892), II, 44; G.J. Holyoake, "Bygones Worth Remembering"
|
||
(1905), II, 108.]
|
||
|
||
As a further means of enriching the Sunday for the working
|
||
classes, the Secularists worked for Sunday music in the parks.
|
||
Their actions in this specific aspect of their Sunday program
|
||
began in 1856 when the Prime Minister, Lord Palmerston, on the
|
||
appeal of the Archbishop of Canterbury, countermanded an order he
|
||
had previously given for government bands to play on Sunday in
|
||
the London parks. Incensed at the reversal of policy, the
|
||
Secularists resolutely asserted themselves. Holyoake wrote public
|
||
letters on the subject to both the Prime Minister and the
|
||
Archbishop of Canterbury, and Secularists not only wrote and
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
spoke in protest against the removal of the bands, but attended
|
||
great indignation meetings arranged by the Sunday League. When
|
||
all of this led to no results, the Secularists aided the League
|
||
in putting into effect an arrangement by which private bands,
|
||
financed by popular subscription and by the sale of programs and
|
||
seats, provided music on Sunday during the summer months in the
|
||
parks of London and other cities. ["Reasoner," April 27, 1856,
|
||
to October 9, 1859, passim; "The Sunday Bands," "National
|
||
Reformer," May 28, 1865; W. Palmer, "Sunday Music in the Parks,"
|
||
"National Reformer," May 21, 1865; Joseph McCabe, "Life and
|
||
Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), I, 284.
|
||
|
||
In still another way the Secularists endeavored to make the
|
||
Sunday a brighter day for themselves and others of the laboring
|
||
masses. During the holiday season they held excursions from time
|
||
to time on that day Sometimes a Secularist excursion was
|
||
conducted by a single society; but often a number of societies
|
||
would combine to arrange a trip to some designated point.
|
||
Secularist excursions were occasions for a variety of outdoor
|
||
games and diversions. Music, too, was enjoyed, and there were
|
||
speeches and a picnic lunch. Excursions were conducted, among
|
||
other places, to Hollingworth Lake, Broxbourne, Rye House,
|
||
Mottram, Forest Gate, Todmorden, High Beech, Richmond, Marsden
|
||
Rock, Riddlesdown, and Campsie Glen. [For typical references to
|
||
Secularist excursions, see the following: "Reasoner" August 24,
|
||
1853; "Investigator," August 1, 1859; "National Reformer," July
|
||
8, 1866.]
|
||
|
||
As a means at once of providing recreation and fostering
|
||
social feeling, the early Secularists also arranged for
|
||
themselves and their friends occasional Sunday or week-day
|
||
entertainments. At these affairs conversation, games, talks,
|
||
music, and dancing all found a place, and, of course, there were
|
||
refreshments. [Examples of the countless references in
|
||
Secularist periodicals to social Meetings are the following:
|
||
"Reasoner," November 5, 1854, and December 9. 1957: "National
|
||
Reformer," November 23, 1861, and "Secular Organization,"
|
||
"National Reformer," September 2, 1866.]
|
||
|
||
The Secularists of the early years made an effort, too, to
|
||
overcome as far as possible the woeful insecurity which in that
|
||
period oppressed the working classes. For this purpose they
|
||
maintained a "General Secular Benevolent Society." The
|
||
institution was founded by the London Secular Society, but it was
|
||
operated in the interest of Secularists throughout the country.
|
||
The funds of the association were raised by subscription, and
|
||
financial assistance was given to persons in distress. The
|
||
Society was enrolled under the Friendly Societies Act in 1859.
|
||
["Reasoner," September 17, 1854. to June 2, 1860, passim;
|
||
"National Reformer." June 2, 1860, to October 29, 1865, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Perhaps the most, basic work of the early Secularists in
|
||
their effort at social reform was the activity they carried on
|
||
for the elimination of the poverty that weighed so heavily upon
|
||
the laboring classes of those days.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
For a key to the solution of the problem of poverty, the
|
||
Secularists turned to the past. At the beginning of the 19th
|
||
century Thomas Malthus, in his 'Essay on the Principle of
|
||
Population,' had asserted that inasmuch as man's ability to
|
||
reproduce himself exceeds the power of nature to provide him with
|
||
the means of subsistence, human misery ensues unless man's
|
||
reproductive activities are curbed through the delay of marriage.
|
||
Francis Place. a generation later, accepted Malthus's doctrine
|
||
that the curtailment of human reproduction is the only means of
|
||
preventing the suffering attendant upon a deficiency of
|
||
nourishment, and, rejecting the Malthusian proposal as to
|
||
marriage, went on to formulate the principle that the proper
|
||
check to reproduction is through contraception. Place did not,
|
||
however, stop here. Aided by Richard Carlile, he carried on a
|
||
campaign among the people, telling them that the avoidance of
|
||
poverty is possible through family limitation, and acquainting
|
||
them with the nature and proper use of birth-control facilities.
|
||
The Secularists took over these Neo-Malthusian principles
|
||
championed by Place and Carlile as a remedy for poverty, and
|
||
carried forward the agitation they had begun." [Norman S. Himes.
|
||
"Medical History of Contraception" (1936), pp. 209-236; C.V.
|
||
Drvsdale, "Bradlaugh and Neo-Malthusianism." "Champion of
|
||
Liberty: Charles Bradlaugh" (1933); Annie Besant, "The Law
|
||
Population" (1877); Charles Bradlaugh and Annie Besant,
|
||
"Publishers, Preface to Dr, Knowlton's 'Fruits of Philosophy
|
||
"National Reformer," March 25, 1977.]
|
||
|
||
The leadership in the Secularist birth-control agitation was
|
||
taken by Bradlaugh. He early spoke in favor of contraception, and
|
||
upon the appearance of the 'National Reformer' he committed that
|
||
journal to its advocacy. In 1861 he announced the formation of a
|
||
"Malthusian League" to further the cause. During the next few
|
||
years he wrote several times on the subject. In an article in the
|
||
National Reformer he declared, "A terrible error has been
|
||
permitted to go forth to the world, clothed with the authority of
|
||
divine command to humankind. The writer of Genesis says, 'Be
|
||
fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth,' but the Bible
|
||
nowhere teaches that the natural rate of the increase of
|
||
population is in excess of the rate of increase of the means of
|
||
subsistence." [Charles Bradlaugh "The Malthusian League,"
|
||
"National Reformer," August 22, 1863.] In a pamphlet, Jesus,
|
||
Shelley, and Malthus (1861), he suggested that poverty should
|
||
neither be extolled as a virtue nor merely denounced as an evil,
|
||
but should be wiped out -- by Neo-Malthusian means. In a pamphlet
|
||
entitled Poverty: Its Effect Upon the Political Condition of the
|
||
People (1863), he contended that political freedom could be
|
||
achieved by the masses only to the degree that they were able to
|
||
divest themselves of poverty; but inasmuch as poverty was the
|
||
result of overpopulation, it could be eliminated through the
|
||
prevention of an excessive number of births. In a third pamphlet,
|
||
Why Do Men Starve? (1865), he asserted that they did so because
|
||
they were ignorant of the great Malthusian law of population, In
|
||
still another pamphlet, Labour's Prayer (1865), he maintained
|
||
that though the workers prayed to God without avail for relief
|
||
from poverty, they could secure relief through exercising a
|
||
degree of caution in increasing their numbers. Bradlaugh's birth-
|
||
control activities were accompanied by the efforts of other
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Secularists. Opposition to the agitation arose, however, from
|
||
Joseph Barker and others within the Secularist body. Possibly
|
||
because of this fact, the activity of the Secularists in the
|
||
interest of contraception tended in the last days of the early
|
||
era of Secularist history to become quiescent. Articles in the
|
||
National Reformer dwindled. Lectures became infrequent. Fresh
|
||
pamphlets ceased to appear. The Malthusian League all but
|
||
flickered out. ["National Reformer," June 14, 1860, to June 17,
|
||
1866, passim; Charles Bradlaugh, "Jesus, Shelley, and Malthus"
|
||
(1861); Charles Bradlaugh, "Poverty: Its Effect Upon the,
|
||
Political Condition of the People" (1963); Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
"Why Do Men Starve?" (1865); Charles Bradlaugh, "Labour's Prayer"
|
||
(1965); Joseph Burker, "Modern Skepticism: A Life Story" (1874).]
|
||
|
||
The labors of the Secularists in the interest of political
|
||
and social betterment during the early years of the Secular
|
||
Movement were paralleled by Secularist efforts for the reform of
|
||
education. The system of church-controlled schools prevailing in
|
||
the era did not satisfy the Secularists, both because it failed
|
||
to provide training for all and because it called for the
|
||
inculcation of religious dogmas; and they gave their
|
||
dissatisfaction appropriate expression by working to promote
|
||
universal education which would involve instruction exclusively
|
||
"in matters and duties pertaining to this life,"
|
||
|
||
As one part of this undertaking, the Secularists endeavored
|
||
to bring about a state-operated school system which would afford
|
||
strictly Secular education for the entire population. They not
|
||
only wrote and spoke as Secularists in the interest of an
|
||
educational system "free from the dogmatism of creeds," but
|
||
supported the agitation of a Manchester association, known as
|
||
"The Friends of Secular Education," which was composed of persons
|
||
who were not identified with the Secularist body -- though in
|
||
doing so the Secularists acted unobtrusively, lest they give
|
||
occasion to religious opponents of Secular education to declare
|
||
the Manchester movement "Infidel." ["Reasoner," June 2, 1852, to
|
||
August 19, 1857; G.J. Holyoake, "Secularism, the Practical
|
||
Philosophy of the People" (1954), pp. 11-12; Charles Bradlaugh
|
||
and G.J. Holyoake, "Secularism, Science and Atheism" (1870),
|
||
passim.]
|
||
|
||
As the other phase of their work in behalf of Secular
|
||
education, the Secularists operated Secular schools of their own
|
||
-- no doubt with the expectation that they would be allowed to
|
||
lapse with the advent of a national system of schools providing
|
||
Secular instruction. Some of the Secularist schools gave day or
|
||
night instruction on week days, while others took the form of
|
||
Sunday schools, with classes usually in both the morning and
|
||
afternoon. Though the curricula varied, courses were given, in
|
||
one school or another, in the elementary subjects, in history and
|
||
science, and in the arts. Each school was attached to and
|
||
maintained by one of the various local Secular societies. In the
|
||
course of the period of Secularist history under discussion, at
|
||
least five or six schools were operated in London, and one each
|
||
in Birmingham, Glasgow, Rochdale, Halifax, Ashton-under-Lyne,
|
||
Huddersfield, Keighley, and possibly other places. Instruction in
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
the Secularist schools was ordinarily made available to children
|
||
and adults alike. ["Reasoner," March 4, 1852, to December 9,
|
||
1857, passim; "National Reformer," September 7, 1861, to August
|
||
26, 1866, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Of the several campaigns waged by the early Secularists in
|
||
their efforts to be of service in achieving improvement in
|
||
various departments of the social order, there is left for
|
||
discussion their struggle for the removal of obstructions and
|
||
dangers to intellectual freedom that remained from an earlier day
|
||
or were revived in their own -- obstructions and dangers which
|
||
were operative primarily against the working classes. This fight
|
||
they carried on partly by means of efforts looking to the
|
||
promotion among the people of attitudes unfriendly to all such
|
||
dangers and obstructions. Thus with tongue and pen they pleaded
|
||
the cause of freedom of thought in general. Holyoake, for
|
||
example, once declared:
|
||
|
||
"Free inquiry ... is the first condition of progress.
|
||
All men may not be clever logicians; but their errors far
|
||
oftener arise from omitting to inquire than from error in
|
||
reasoning, They take so much for granted, that thought has
|
||
no proper and pure materials to exercise itself upon. Why is
|
||
the finder of facts, and facts are the food of thought, and
|
||
thought is the master of progress. . ." ["Reasoner," March
|
||
11, 1855. See also "Reasoner," passim, and G.J. Holyoake,
|
||
"Secularism, the Practical Philosophy of the People"
|
||
(1854).]
|
||
|
||
Besides making general appeals for intellectual liberty, the
|
||
Secularists worked for its realization in various limited
|
||
spheres. They contended, to begin with, for the right, which
|
||
theoretically had already been won, of public meetings in the
|
||
parks; and Bradlaugh, in 1855, twice rendered extraordinary
|
||
service in the cause. The first instance occurred at a Hyde Park
|
||
mass meeting of lower-class Londoners which was being undertaken,
|
||
despite a prohibitory notice by Sir Richard Mayne, Chief
|
||
Commissioner of Police, to protest against a bill that Lord
|
||
Robert Grosvernor had introduced in the House of Commons for
|
||
regulating the Sunday trading of the London poor. The authorities
|
||
moved to disperse the crowd, and Bradlaugh, mindful of the right
|
||
of meeting, resisted. "When others fled before a charge of
|
||
police," says Holyoake, "he stood his ground and seized in each
|
||
hand the truncheons of the two policemen, disarmed them, and
|
||
threatened to knock down a third policeman with each of the
|
||
truncheons if he approached." [G.J. Holyoake, "Life and Career
|
||
of Charles Bradlaugh" (1891).] On a subsequent occasion
|
||
Bradlaugh aided the cause with his testimony. Appearing before a
|
||
Royal Commission ordered by the House of Commons, he denied the
|
||
right of Sir R. Mayne to issue notices forbidding the people to
|
||
meet in Hyde Park. [Charles Bradlaugh, "Autobiography of Mr.
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh," "National Reformer," August 31, 1873; Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "To the National Secular Society," "National
|
||
Reformer," April 28, 1878.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
The early Secularists likewise endeavored to insure the
|
||
continued application of the acknowledged principle of a free
|
||
press. They advanced arguments to that end, and on one occasion,
|
||
when the freedom of the press was actually imperilled, they came
|
||
to grips with the Government.
|
||
|
||
Their struggle with the Government arose when Edward
|
||
Truelove, a London publisher, was arrested by Government warrant
|
||
for publishing a pamphlet by W.E. Adams, Tyrannicide: Is It
|
||
Justifiable? which contained arguments in support of Orsini's
|
||
attempt on the life of Napoleon III. Bradlaugh became Honorary
|
||
Secretary of a committee formed to raise funds for defraying the
|
||
cost of Truelove's defense, and appeals for funds for the defense
|
||
were made both in the Reasoner and in the Investigator. Before
|
||
the case actually came to trial, the Government withdrew, on a
|
||
promise being given to discontinue the sale of the pamphlet."
|
||
["Reasoner," February 24 and March 24, 1858; "Investigator,"
|
||
March 1, March 15, April 1, and July 15, 1858; Hypatia Bradlaugh
|
||
Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 17 and 64-71.]
|
||
|
||
Secularist efforts were also exerted to secure the removal
|
||
of a number of indirect restrictions on the press which took the
|
||
form of taxes. When the Secular Movement came into being there
|
||
were duties alike on paper, on advertisements, and on newspapers;
|
||
and there was in existence, for the purpose of putting an end to
|
||
these burdens, the Association for Promoting the Repeal of the
|
||
Taxes on Knowledge. What the Secularists did was to aid the
|
||
Association in its work. Holyoake, who had already been of
|
||
service as a member of the Committee of the Association and as
|
||
Editor of the Reasoner before the Secular Movement began,
|
||
continued as a Secularist to serve on the Committee and to use
|
||
the Reasoner as a medium of publicity. But this was not all. Many
|
||
Secularists, encouraged by Holyoake, contributed funds in aid of
|
||
the Association and assisted it by signing and circulating
|
||
petitions to Parliament; and in one part of the work of the
|
||
Association, that of securing the repeal of the newspaper tax,
|
||
Holyoake himself helped by withholding from the Government the
|
||
taxes due on what was in effect a weekly newspaper which he
|
||
published for the Committee:
|
||
|
||
Aided thus by Secularist contributions, and by the exertions
|
||
of publishers and members of Parliament, the Association was
|
||
successful in its operations: as early as 1853 the duty on
|
||
advertisements was removed; the year 1855 saw the abolition of
|
||
the newspaper stamp; the paper duty disappeared in 1861.
|
||
["Reasoner," August 1, 1849 - May 19, 1861, passim; "Presentation
|
||
to Mr. C.D. Collet," "National Reformer," March 15, 1862; C.D.
|
||
Collet, "History of the Taxes on Knowledge," I and II; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life" (1892), 1, 273 ff.;
|
||
G.J. Holyoake, "Bygones Worth Remembering" (1905), I, 118-123 and
|
||
11, 269-271; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob
|
||
Holyoake" (1908), I, 257-275.]
|
||
|
||
A notable phase of the effort which the Secularists exerted
|
||
in behalf of the free play of ideas within limited spheres was
|
||
their activity directed toward securing equality before the law
|
||
for all forms of speculative opinion. One part of this work was
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
26
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
their attempt to effect a modification of the arrangements
|
||
concerning the taking, of oaths. It will he recalled that as the
|
||
situation stood when the Secularists began their work Quakers and
|
||
other religious persons who had conscientious scruples against
|
||
oath-taking were permitted to accompany their legal testimony
|
||
with an affirmation, but that no such privilege was extended to
|
||
the non-religious. What the Secularists did, therefore, was to
|
||
advocate legislation to the end that Secularists and other non-
|
||
religious persons who objected to taking an oath might be
|
||
permitted the right of affirmation. In the earliest stages of the
|
||
Secular Movement (and even before) Holyoake petitioned the House
|
||
of Commons and utilized the Reasoner in the interest of remedial
|
||
legislation. In 1861, when Sir John Trelawney's Affirmation Bill
|
||
was before Parliament, Holyoake and other Secularists raised or
|
||
contributed funds and signed petitions in aid of the measure,
|
||
while Secularist writers called for its support, After the Bill
|
||
introduced by Trelawney had failed to pass, the Secularist
|
||
agitation continued. Writings by Secularists in favor of the
|
||
right to affirm now appeared in both the 'Counsellor' and the
|
||
'National Reformer.' ["Reasoner," July 8, 1849, to April 28,
|
||
1961, passim; "National Reformer," March 23, 1961, and March 15
|
||
and 29, 1862: "Counsellor," August 1, October, and December,
|
||
1861; G.J. Holyoake, "Secularism: the Practical Philosophy of the
|
||
People" (1854), n, 12; G.J. Holyoake and Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
"Secularism, Science, and Atheism" (1870), pp. 31-32; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life" (1892), II, 44:
|
||
G.J. Holyoake, "Bygones Worth Remembering" ( 1905), II, 78-91 and
|
||
95; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake,"
|
||
(1908), I, 283, 303-304, and 337-338; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner,
|
||
"Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), 129 and 168-169; A.S. Headingley,
|
||
"Biography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 83-85 and 96.]
|
||
|
||
Another portion of the Secularist activity designed to
|
||
equalize all beliefs in the eyes of the law was their endeavor to
|
||
effect the disestablishment of the State Church. In this work the
|
||
Secularists utilized both the platform and the press, and based
|
||
their appeals upon a variety of grounds. Bradlaugh, for example,
|
||
on one occasion attacked the State Church with arguments derived
|
||
both from history and from the contemporary scene:
|
||
|
||
"We desire to overturn the State Church and the State
|
||
Religion, because the existence of a State Church and State
|
||
Religion has ever been attended by crime, fraud, and
|
||
persecution; because a State Church has ever proved an
|
||
obstacle to political reform; because a State Church is like
|
||
a vampire, devouring the estates of our dead citizens and
|
||
preying on the industry of our living brothers and sisters."
|
||
[Charles Bradlaugh, "Our Policy," "National Reformer,"
|
||
September 14, 1861.]
|
||
|
||
And at another time Bradlaugh appealed for the cause alike
|
||
on intellectual and ethical grounds:
|
||
|
||
"We attack the Church of England because by law the
|
||
Church is protected, to the disadvantage of all other
|
||
bodies. We deny the right of any statute-makers to limit
|
||
thought, or to grant a monopoly of trade in salvation. The
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
27
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Church is either of God or man. If of God, human legislation
|
||
can never add to its strength; and if the Church be of man
|
||
and not of God, then it exists under false pretenses, and
|
||
our attack is justified ... We attack the State Church and
|
||
its revenues because the Church of Christ, while declaring
|
||
that poverty is a blessing, has no logical justification for
|
||
its riches." [Charles Bradlaugh, "To New and Old
|
||
Supporters," "National Reformer," April 29, 1866. See also
|
||
the following: G.J. Holyoake and Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
"Secularism, Science, and Atheism" (1870), pp. 31-32; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake. "Bygones Worth Remembering" (1905). II. 108; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life" (1892). II,
|
||
44; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob
|
||
Holyoake (1908), I, 283; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 129.]
|
||
|
||
The remaining phase of the work by which the early
|
||
Secularists attempted the equalization of opinions before the law
|
||
was their effort to remove legal dangers attendant upon the
|
||
criticism of religion. Efforts in this direction were not, it is
|
||
true, undertaken at the very outset of the Secular Movement; for,
|
||
though speaking in reproach of the Christian religion was
|
||
punishable as blasphemy both under the Common Law and under a
|
||
statute dating back, in its essentials, to the reign of William
|
||
III, no prosecutions for blasphemy had taken place for several
|
||
years, and little, apprehension was felt of danger in that
|
||
direction. But in 1857 the situation was changed. The prosecution
|
||
in that year of Thomas Pooley. an illiterate well-sinker who was
|
||
not exactly sane, for blasphemy roused the Secularists to action
|
||
looking to the repeal of the blasphemy laws. As a first step,
|
||
they utilized the Pooley case as a means of discrediting them.
|
||
Holyoake, with the aid of funds contributed by Secularists,
|
||
investigated and publicized the whole affair. Percy Greg, who was
|
||
then identified with the Secularists under the name of Lionel
|
||
Holdreth, wrote letters to the 'Times' and the 'Daily News'
|
||
censuring the authorities for the "meanness and wickedness of
|
||
attacking this poor and defenseless man." Greg also wrote public
|
||
letters of protest to Mr. Justice Coleridge, who presided at the
|
||
trial, and to Sir R. Bethell, the Attorney General. And various
|
||
Secularists petitioned the Secretary of State for the Home
|
||
Department asking for the annulment of the sentence of 21 months'
|
||
imprisonment which had been meted out to the defendant. Thanks to
|
||
all this Secularist activity, and to similar efforts on the part
|
||
of Buckle, John Stuart Mill, certain journalists, various
|
||
clergymen, and others, as well as to the fact that Pooley's
|
||
mental condition was worsened by his confinement, the prisoner
|
||
was released after five months. ["Reasoner" August 12 to
|
||
December 23, 1857, passim: Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Penalties
|
||
Upon Opinion" (2 ed., 1913), pp. 69-70; "Sugar Plums,"
|
||
"Freethinker," March 12, 1905.]
|
||
|
||
In the years that followed the Pooley affair the Secularists
|
||
worked directly for the repeal of the blasphemy laws. Thus
|
||
Bradlaugh called for their destruction on the ground that they
|
||
were at once unjust, futile, and discriminatory:
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
28
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"We desire to remove from our statute books all
|
||
enactments and restrictions on blasphemy and infidelity,
|
||
because it is manifestly unjust to prosecute a man for the
|
||
honest utterance of his views, and because such enactments
|
||
have a tendency rather to produce hypocrisy than faith. We
|
||
object that at present a Turk, or Chinaman, or a Brahmin may
|
||
deny Christianity in England without committing an offense,
|
||
while we 'freeborn Englishmen' are liable for the same
|
||
denial to fine, imprisonment, and outlawry." [Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "Our Policy," "National Reformer," September 14,
|
||
1861.]
|
||
|
||
Thus, too, Bradlaugh strove to end the detested measures by
|
||
heaping upon them his contempt:
|
||
|
||
"We declare that the Statutes against blasphemy by
|
||
which any Englishman is prohibited from denying, by word or
|
||
writing, any or either of the Thirty-nine Articles are a
|
||
disgrace to our civilization; and we shall continue to deny,
|
||
both orally and by writing, until the Church authorities
|
||
either prosecute us, or, for shame's sake, relinquish their
|
||
statute privilege of persecuting others." [Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "To Old and New Supporters," "National Reformer,"
|
||
April 29, 1866. See also Charles Bradlaugh, "Our Politics,"
|
||
"National Reformer," May 6, 186, and Hypatia Bradlaugh
|
||
Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 129.
|
||
|
||
ATTACKING THE CHURCHES
|
||
|
||
Paralleling the activity of the early Secularists in
|
||
advancing the doctrines of Secularism was the expenditure of
|
||
Secularist energy in a campaign against the churches. It is true,
|
||
as will be seen, that the Secularists were not in agreement as to
|
||
the advisability of attacking religion, and that some of them did
|
||
not participate in the campaign. Others, however, did so. The
|
||
basis of the attack of these Secularists on the churches was, of
|
||
course, the fact that, speaking in general, the religious bodies
|
||
impeded the removal of abuses in society, indirectly by the
|
||
inculcation of non-earthly attitudes among the people and
|
||
directly through the furtherance of interests associated
|
||
primarily with the upper classes. In waging among the masses a
|
||
crusade against religion, the anti-theological Secularists
|
||
carried forward a work which broadly speaking, had been initiated
|
||
by Thomas Paine and which had been continued, on the one, hand,
|
||
by Richard Carlile and other detached individuals, and, on the
|
||
other, by such Owenites as Charles Southwell and Holyoake. The
|
||
Secularist attack upon theology found expression in an occasional
|
||
book, in numerous articles and pamphlets, and in great numbers of
|
||
lectures.
|
||
|
||
In carrying on their agitation the Secularist opponents of
|
||
theology used alike the arguments of distinguished rationalists
|
||
and the findings of science, history, and the higher biblical
|
||
criticism. As a matter of fact, the exploitation of reason,
|
||
science, biblical scholarship, and history constituted, for
|
||
practical purposes, the sum and substance of the anti-religious
|
||
work of the Secularists. It will be convenient, therefore, to
|
||
examine their activity under these four headings.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
29
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
In utilizing reason against the religious interests, the
|
||
Secularists discussed mainly the Bible, immortality, and God.
|
||
With respect to the Bible, Secularist spokesmen contended that it
|
||
was not a divine revelation, but was simply a man-made book,
|
||
characterized by the frailties and imperfections of man and
|
||
reflecting the diverse minds and the various ages that produced
|
||
it. In support of this contention they brought forward "proofs"
|
||
of its fallibility. They endeavored, for one thing, to show that
|
||
its morality was a low one. For example, the Secularist writer
|
||
John Watts declared, "Deeds are here attributed to Deity that
|
||
would stamp the name of any man with well-merited infamy." [John
|
||
Watts, "Who is the Lord, that I Should Obey His Voice?" (1862).]
|
||
And Bradlaugh held up to scorn the misdeeds of such leading
|
||
biblical characters as Abraham, Jacob, Moses, and David. The
|
||
Secularists also attempted to show that the Bible contained
|
||
numerous discrepancies and contradictions, and that it
|
||
accordingly was not reliable. Bradlaugh, for instance, once said
|
||
(along, of course, with other things in the same vein) : "Take
|
||
... the healing of the centurion's servant, as contained in
|
||
Matthew ... and Luke ... : according to one gospel, the centurion
|
||
comes to Jesus; according to the other, he does not; according to
|
||
one, the healing took place before the healing of Peter's mother-
|
||
in-law, before the calling of Matthew and before the choice of
|
||
the 12; according to the other, the healing took place after all
|
||
three." ["Debate at Birmingham. ... National Reformer," October
|
||
12, 1961. See also the following: Robert Cooper, "The Bible and
|
||
Its Evidences" (1858); Iconoclast (Charles Bradlaugh),."The Bible
|
||
Not Reliable" (1858); "A Discussion ... Between the Rev.
|
||
Woodville, Woodman and 'Iconoclast'," "National Reformer,"
|
||
November 2, 1861; Charles Bradlaugh, "To New and Old Supporters,"
|
||
"National Reformer," April 2, 1866.]
|
||
|
||
Concerning immortality, the Secularists energetically argued
|
||
either that it did not exist or that its existence was highly
|
||
improbable -- generally the former. Though Bradlaugh, John Watts,
|
||
and others took part in the agitation, perhaps the most
|
||
thoroughgoing efforts were those of Robert Cooper, who endeavored
|
||
to refute the outstanding arguments which proponents of the
|
||
doctrine of immortality had at one time or another advanced in
|
||
its behalf. To the argument for immortality based upon the
|
||
"universality" of the belief, he contended that the universality
|
||
of an opinion does not establish its validity, but that in any
|
||
case the belief in immortality was not universal. To the argument
|
||
that the doctrine of immortality is a consoling one, he replied
|
||
that though consolation might be derived from the anticipation of
|
||
heaven, it certainly was not to be had from the dread of hell. To
|
||
the argument that immortality is necessary to correct the
|
||
inequalities associated with life upon earth, he affirmed his
|
||
conviction that such inequalities would not be corrected beyond
|
||
the grave. "What!" he once asserted, "Because Deity cannot or
|
||
will not reward virtue and punish vice sufficiently in this
|
||
world, is that any assurance that he can or will do so in a world
|
||
to come? Because he allows injustice to be perpetrated here, is
|
||
that a Security that he would permit justice only to be
|
||
administered hereafter)" [Robert Cooper, "A Reply to Thomas
|
||
Cooper's Recent Lectures on 'God and a Future Life"' (1856), p.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
9.] Finally, to the argument that God would not have implanted
|
||
in men an ardent desire for immortality had he not intended to
|
||
extend it to them, Cooper asserted that human desires are not
|
||
invariably fulfilled. His own words are interesting:
|
||
|
||
"Probably the most esteemed position in favor of
|
||
immortality is the following: 'It accords with the fondest
|
||
hopes and wishes of man; and God would never have implanted
|
||
in us a desire so predominant, were it not ultimately to be
|
||
gratified.' I reply ... because we 'desire' an object are we
|
||
therefore to infer, as rational beings, that our
|
||
inclinations will be realized? I have heard of 'jumping to
|
||
conclusions,' but this exceeds anything on record. If we
|
||
take an illustration, its gross fallacy will be palpable.
|
||
The desire to become rich is a strong feeling in every human
|
||
breast. Therefore every human being will some day be rich. I
|
||
might with great propriety maintain that this desire
|
||
'accords with the fondest hopes and wishes of man; and God
|
||
would never have implanted in us a desire so predominant,
|
||
unless it were ultimately to be gratified.' The argument is
|
||
a parallel one, and equally conclusive and legitimate."
|
||
[Robert Cooper, "The Immortality of the Soul, Religiously
|
||
and Philosophically Considered," pp. 23-25. See also the
|
||
following: Charles Bradlaugh, "Has Man a Soul?" (1860?), and
|
||
John Watts, "Secularism: Its Relation to Christianity,"
|
||
"National Reformer," April 2, 1864.]
|
||
|
||
As regards God, Secularists such as Bradlaugh, Robert
|
||
Cooper, John Watts, and Holyoake (who sometimes disregarded his
|
||
avowed policy of not attacking the churches) advanced a variety
|
||
of arguments which were anti-theistic in character. One of these
|
||
was to the effect that the absolute creation of substance is
|
||
inconceivable. Another had it that the conception of an all-good,
|
||
all-wise, and all-powerful Deity is incompatible with the
|
||
existence of evil, A third stated that if God existed he would
|
||
make his existence known to men. Some of the Secularist arguments
|
||
were directed against the efforts of theists to prove God's
|
||
existence. Thus the contention that the moral tendencies in man
|
||
bespeak a moral governor was countered with the proposition that
|
||
it is just as true (or false) to say that the immoral tendencies
|
||
in man point to an immoral governor. And the argument from
|
||
design, to the effect that the marks of "design" in nature show a
|
||
designer of intelligence, was "answered" by the assertion that
|
||
under the same logic the designer himself must be admitted to
|
||
have been designed. [Robert Cooper, "A Reply to Thomas Cooper's
|
||
Recent Lectures on 'God and a Future State"' (1866); Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "Is There a God?" (1864 or earlier); John Watts, "The
|
||
Logic and Philosophy of Atheism" (1865); Charles Bradlaugh, "A
|
||
Plea for Atheism" (1864 or earlier); G.J. Holyoake, "Trial of
|
||
Theism" (1858).]
|
||
|
||
The efforts of the Secularists to discredit theology by
|
||
appealing to science ordinarily took the form of pointing out
|
||
"discrepancies" between science (including evolutionary
|
||
teachings) and the Bible. At one time they would assert that
|
||
science emphatically declares man to have existed on earth for a
|
||
far greater period than that indicated in the Bible. At another
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
31
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
time they would contrast the scriptural view of the universe with
|
||
that of science -- as when Bradlaugh declared: "We notice that
|
||
the biblical account of the creation and its subsequent
|
||
references to the universe would picture the earth as the
|
||
principal feature of all existence, with the sun and moon as two
|
||
great lights, and the stars as simple accessories to the
|
||
illumination or adornment of the earth. It represents the earth
|
||
as a stationary, flat surface, with heaven above; that the sun
|
||
moved round the earth, and that the whole earth might be surveyed
|
||
from the summit of an exceedingly high mountain. Astronomical
|
||
discoveries have demonstrated the contrary of all this, and the
|
||
Bible is thus clearly not reliable." ["Iconoclast" (Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh), "The Bible Not Reliable" (1858). See also Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "Were Adam and Eve Our First parents?" (1864 or
|
||
earlier).]
|
||
|
||
The use of the higher biblical criticism in connection with
|
||
the Secularist campaign against the churches centered in efforts
|
||
of the Secularists to discredit the traditional Christian
|
||
teachings as to the authorship of various books of the Bible. As
|
||
an instance of this sort of thing, Bradlaugh once assereted that
|
||
no one knew by whom, when, or where the Pentateuch was written;
|
||
and on another occasion he made a similar statement with respect
|
||
to the Four Gospels.
|
||
|
||
The Secularists exploited history for their anti-religious
|
||
purposes in two or three different ways. For one thing, they
|
||
issued a publication, entitled Half-Hours with the Freethinkers,
|
||
containing short accounts of the lives and doctrines of eminent
|
||
freethought writers in all ages and lands. The work contained two
|
||
volumes. The first, which was prepared jointly by John Watts,
|
||
Bradlaugh, and W.H. Johnson, and which contained 24 biographies,
|
||
was completed in 1857. The second, containing 24 sketches, was
|
||
edited by Bradlaugh and John Watts, and appeared in 1864. In
|
||
these books, which brought together in readable form information
|
||
hitherto widely scattered and often inaccessible, the authors
|
||
aimed to show the common people that numbers of eminent men had
|
||
chosen to think freely for themselves on religious matters. Among
|
||
those whose lives were treated in the Half-Hours were Shelley,
|
||
Zeno, Voltaire, Spinoza, Hobbes, Paine, Epicures, Descartes,
|
||
Priestley, Hume, Condorcet, Helvetius, Anthony Collins, and
|
||
Holbach. The volumes were restrained in tone and were in
|
||
Considerable demand. [John Watts, "Iconoclast" (Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh), and "A. Collins" (W.H. Johnson), editors, "Half-Hours
|
||
with the Freethinkers" (1857); "Reasoner," January 18 and
|
||
September 9, 1857; "Autobiography of Mr. Charles BradlAugh,"
|
||
"National Reformer," August 31, 1873.]
|
||
|
||
On the strength of historical evidence the Secularists also
|
||
worked to destroy the notion that the religious beliefs and
|
||
practices mentioned in the Bible were unique and unrelated to
|
||
others. They pointed out identical or similar features associated
|
||
with the alien theologies, and suggested in each case that one of
|
||
the two systems was copied from the other or that both were
|
||
descended from a common original. In this connection they
|
||
published lists of Hebrew practices which they declared to have
|
||
been taken over from the Egyptians, and set forth resemblances
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
32
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
between Christian and Hindu teachings. On this last point, for
|
||
example, Bradlaugh once wrote as follows: "There are strange
|
||
similarities an coincidences between the myths of Christianity
|
||
and Hindooism. In each a trinity -- Father, Son, and Holy Ghost
|
||
-- Brahm, Vishnu, and Siva. In each a war in heaven and expulsion
|
||
of the rebellious angelic hosts. In each a good and evil spirit
|
||
who contend. In each an Abba Rama (Abram Brama). in each an
|
||
incarnation (Chrisna -- Christ). In this God man's history we
|
||
obtain further likenesses:
|
||
|
||
CHRIST CHRISNA
|
||
|
||
Of royal descent. Of royal descent.
|
||
Born of the Virgin Mary. Born of the Virgin.
|
||
In the lifetime of the In the lifetime of the
|
||
tyrant Herod. tyrant Cansa.
|
||
Who sought to kill him. Who sought to kill him.
|
||
He fled from the land of He fled from the land of
|
||
his birth. his birth.
|
||
Into Egypt where he was Into Mathura where he was
|
||
fostered fostered
|
||
by Joseph and his wife Mary. by Anada and his wife
|
||
Yasoda.
|
||
During his absence mothers wept During his absence mothers
|
||
wept
|
||
for their children destroyed. for their children
|
||
destroyed.
|
||
He was to bruise the serpent's He slew the serpent Caliya.
|
||
head.
|
||
He was meek. He was meek.
|
||
He washed the feet of the He washed the feet of the
|
||
Apostles. Brahmins.
|
||
He said faith would remove He by faith did remove
|
||
a mountain. a mountain on the tip of
|
||
his finger.
|
||
He made the blind to see. He made the blind to see.
|
||
And the lame to walk. And the lame to walk.
|
||
And raised the dead. And raised the dead.
|
||
He descended into hell. He went down into the lower
|
||
regions.
|
||
He ascended into heaven. He ascended into heaven.
|
||
|
||
["Our Christianity," "National Reformer," February 8, 1862. See
|
||
also "Egypt and Mosaism," "National Reforaier," April 20, 1862.]
|
||
|
||
Finally, the Secularists condemned in no uncertain terms the
|
||
historical role of the church. With great indignation they
|
||
accused the religionists of systematically and untiringly
|
||
persecuting scientists and progressive thinkers -- as when
|
||
Bradlaugh in the course of a lecture challenged his audience to
|
||
name one science of which the early promulgators were not
|
||
persecuted as heretics and infidels by the Bible teachers.
|
||
[Account, reproduced from "Wigan Observer," of Bradlaugh's
|
||
lectures at Wigan, "National Reformer," October 20, 1860.] And
|
||
with even greater indignation the Secularists declared the church
|
||
to have been in chronic opposition to the spirit of social
|
||
amelioration and, justice. [See for example, "Reasoner,"
|
||
November 16, 1853, Supplement pp, 322-324. See also Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 127-128.]
|
||
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
33
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
OPPOSITION TO SECULARISM
|
||
|
||
The doctrines and activities of the early Secularists evoked
|
||
from various members of the clergy and other Christians a
|
||
determined opposition. The Secularist vision of a material and
|
||
social world devoid of the supernatural element was distasteful
|
||
to the general run of churchmen, as were the individual reforms
|
||
which the Secularists advocated. Even more repugnant was the
|
||
tireless campaign which the Secularist leaders directed against
|
||
the religious interests. Under these circumstances it was
|
||
inevitable that individuals associated with the churches should
|
||
strike at the forces of Secularism. The number of persons who
|
||
combatted the Secular Movement was limited, inasmuch as the bulk
|
||
of the clergy, including especially those of position and
|
||
influence, followed the policy of ignoring Secularism.
|
||
Nevertheless, the opposition was of an extent and significance
|
||
adequate to warrant attention.
|
||
|
||
Among the forms it took were Christian efforts in debates
|
||
against Secularists and in replies to Secularist indoor and
|
||
outdoor lectures. There were also articles attacking Secularism
|
||
in religious periodicals, representative of which was the Rev.
|
||
Joseph Barker's "Six Chapters on Secularism or the Secular Theory
|
||
examined in the light of Scripture and Philosophy," which
|
||
appeared in the 'Christian News' in 1855. Non-periodical
|
||
publications, too, were forthcoming, such as Dr. John Alfred
|
||
Langford's 'Christianity, not Secularism, the practical
|
||
philosophy of the people: a reply to G.J. Holyoake's tract
|
||
"Secularism, the Practical Philosophy of the People" (1854) and
|
||
'The Spurious Ethics of Skeptical Philosophy, a Critique on Mr.
|
||
Holyoake's "Logic of Life"' (1860), by J. Clark. And there were
|
||
sermons. The Rev. J. Logan Aikman, in James's Place Church,
|
||
Edinburgh, denounced the Secular Movement as a vast conspiracy
|
||
for the overthrow of all religion and morality, and the Rev.
|
||
Brewin Grant, at the behest of congregationalist leaders,
|
||
undertook a "three years' mission" to check the spread of
|
||
Secularism. ["Reasoner," January 12 and October 19, 1853, and
|
||
January 11, 1867, to February 15, 1857, inclusive; G.J. Holyoake,
|
||
"English Secularism" (1896), pp. 60-52; "Investigator," July
|
||
1854; R. Cooper, "Autobiographical Sketch of Robert Cooper,"
|
||
"National Reformer," July 12, 1868; G.J. Holyoake, "Sixty Years
|
||
of an Agitator's Life" (1892), 1, 255 and 262; A.S. Headingley,
|
||
"Biography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 49-50.]
|
||
|
||
Such mild forms of opposition to the Secular Movement by no
|
||
means exhausted the resources of those who sought its
|
||
destruction. Frequently expedients of a more drastic character
|
||
were utilized. On several occasions Holyoake, Bradlaugh, and
|
||
other Secularist lecturers were refused the use of halls,
|
||
sometimes after they had already been engaged. Then, too, from
|
||
time to time, hostile action of a disorderly character grew out
|
||
of the efforts of Secularists to hold public meetings. Much light
|
||
is thrown on this latter variety of opposition by Bradlaugh's
|
||
account of his experiences in connection with a lecture which he
|
||
delivered in the Commercial Hall at Wigan on October 10, 1860,
|
||
"On the Wednesday evening," says Bradlaugh, "when I arrived at
|
||
the hall, I found it crowded to excess, and, in addition, many
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
34
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
hundreds outside unable to gain admittance. My name was the
|
||
subject of loud and hostile comment, several pious Christians in
|
||
choice Billingsgate intimating that they would teach me a lesson
|
||
... I requested the religious body to elect a chairman, and Mr.
|
||
Thomas Stuart was voted to the chair. Of this gentleman I must
|
||
say that he was courteous, generous, and manly, and by his kindly
|
||
conduct compelled my respect and admiration. Previous to my
|
||
lecture the majority of those present hooted and yelled with a
|
||
vigor which, if it betokened healthy lungs, did not vouch so well
|
||
for a healthy brain, and I commenced my address amidst a terrific
|
||
din. Each window was besieged, and panes of glass were dashed out
|
||
in mere reckless wantonness, while at the same time a constant
|
||
hammering was kept up at the main door. As this showed no
|
||
prospect of cessation, I went myself to the door, and, to my
|
||
disgust, found that the disturbance was being fostered and
|
||
encouraged by a clergyman of the Church of England [The Rev.
|
||
W.T. Whitehead.] who wished to gain admittance. I told him loss
|
||
of life might follow any attempt to enter the room in its present
|
||
over-crowded state. His answer was, 'That he knew there was
|
||
plenty of room and would come in.' To prevent worse strife I
|
||
admitted him, and by dint of main strength and liberal use of my
|
||
right arm repelled the others, closed the doors, and returned to
|
||
the platform. I had, however, at the door received one blow in
|
||
the ribs, which, coupled with the extraordinary exertions
|
||
required to keep the meeting in cheek, fairly tired me out in
|
||
about an hour. Several times, when any crash betokened a new
|
||
breach in either door or window, the whole of the audience toward
|
||
the end of the room jumped up, and I had literally to keep them
|
||
down by dint of energetic lung power. Toward the conclusion of
|
||
the lecture the secretary of the rector forced his way bodily
|
||
through a window, and I confess I felt a strong inclination to go
|
||
to that end of the room and pitch him back through the same
|
||
aperture. If he had intended a riot, he could not have acted more
|
||
riotously. Some limestone was drawn in at another window, and a
|
||
little water was poured through the ventilators, by some persons
|
||
who had gained possession of the roof. This caused some
|
||
merriment, which turned to alarm when an arm and hand, waving a
|
||
dirty rag, appeared through a little hole in the center of the
|
||
ceiling. One man in a wide-awake then jumped upon one of the
|
||
forms and excitedly shouted to me, 'See, the devil has come for
|
||
you.' After the lecture I received in the confusion several
|
||
blows, but none of importance. When I quitted the building one
|
||
well-dressed man asked me, 'Do you not expect God to strike you
|
||
dead, and don't you deserve that the people should serve you out
|
||
for your blasphemy?' Two spat in my face. I clenched my nails in
|
||
my hands with anger, and wished much that I had a few of my
|
||
Yorkshire friends round me to see fair play while I taught the
|
||
unmanly scoundrels better manners. I judged that it would be
|
||
scarcely wise to take the mob in their excited state to the hotel
|
||
where I was staying, and therefore proceeded to the railway
|
||
station (whither I was accompanied by several hundreds hooting,
|
||
yelling and hissing), preferring rather to take a ticket to
|
||
Liverpool than to have a worse riot. A new dilemma now arose; my
|
||
pockets were empty, all my cash, except some flaw halfpence,
|
||
being at the hotel. Fortunately I found means of escaping my
|
||
pursuers at some slight risk to my neck, and got safely back to
|
||
my hotel. My dangers were not yet over. Although there was no
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
35
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
crowd, only one person with me, and not the slightest disturbance
|
||
at the hotel, the landlady wished me at once to leave the house.
|
||
I appealed to her hospitality in vain. I next stood on my legal
|
||
rights, went to my bed room, locked the door, retired to bed, and
|
||
tried to dream that Wigan was a model Agapemone." [Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "Disgraceful Conduct of the Wigan Clergy," "National
|
||
Reformer," October 20, 1860.]
|
||
|
||
The type of opposition involved in the above episode made
|
||
its appearance repeatedly. Once at Wigan stones were thrown at
|
||
Bradlaugh and John Watts as they entered a hall where a lecture
|
||
was to take place. During one of Bradlaugh's lectures at
|
||
Dumfries, the gas lamps of the hall were smashed and the
|
||
skylights were shattered by stones. When Bradlaugh delivered a
|
||
lecture on one occasion at Norwich, "yells, hisses, abuse, a
|
||
little mud, and a few stones formed the chorus and finale of the
|
||
entertainment." One day when just beginning a lecture at
|
||
Plymouth, Bradlaugh was ejected from a field he had hired for the
|
||
lecture and detained overnight by the police, at the instigation
|
||
of the Young Men's Christian Association. At another time a mob
|
||
at Guernsey broke into the house in which Bradlaugh was speaking.
|
||
Lectures at various places by Mrs. Harriet Law were interfered
|
||
with by persons who put out the lights or sprinkled cayenne
|
||
pepper about the floor. ["National Reformer," March 9, 16, and
|
||
23, 1861; Charles Bradlaugh, "Autobiography of Mr. C. Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1873), pp. 14-16; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1894), 1, 162-193; A.S. Headingley, "Biography of Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 59-79; J.M. Robertson, "Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1920), p. 51; "Mrs. Harriet Law," "Freethinker," August 8,
|
||
1897.]
|
||
|
||
The net result of the opposition of Secularism was the
|
||
strengthening of the Secularist cause. The Secular Movement had
|
||
originated in part as a protest against Christian opposition to
|
||
reform, and each fresh effort of Christians to prevent the
|
||
advancement of the Secularist program simply increased the
|
||
determination of the Secularists to achieve their goals. Then,
|
||
too, the opposition to Secularism constituted an effective
|
||
advertisement of the Secularist program.
|
||
|
||
DISSENSION
|
||
|
||
The Secularists of the early years were not able to avoid
|
||
disagreement within their own ranks. Almost from the very
|
||
beginning of the Secular Movement two factions were in evidence,
|
||
one being composed of Holyoake and persons who supported him, and
|
||
the other containing Bradlaugh and certain supporters of
|
||
Bradlaugh.
|
||
|
||
The Secularists were not in disagreement as to the
|
||
principles of Secularism. It is true that some Secularists were
|
||
Atheists, some were Pantheists. and some were Theists, [See, for
|
||
example, Charles Bradlaugh, "To the ... Archbishop of York,"
|
||
"National Reformer," October 16, 1881.] and that each group
|
||
would have been pleased to convert the others to its viewpoint.
|
||
Eligibility for membership in the Secular body, however, did not
|
||
depend upon these beliefs, but upon the acceptance of the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
36
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
principle that morals and conduct should be devoted to the
|
||
promotion of man's happiness upon earth by natural means: and all
|
||
Secularists, of course, accepted this proposition. The Secularist
|
||
controversy hinged rather upon the question as to how Secularism
|
||
could best be advanced, and was concerned with the problem of
|
||
whether the Secularists should attack the churches. The view of
|
||
Holyoake and those who shared his opinion was that they should
|
||
not do So, [Holyoake spoke of occasions when opposition to
|
||
certain possible accomplishments of theology (such as reliance
|
||
upon prayer or the direct interference by the churches with the
|
||
Secular Movement) would be advisable (see, for example, the
|
||
"Reasoner," June 2, 1858), and from time to time he actually
|
||
attacked the essentials of specific theological doctrines -- as
|
||
in his "Trial of Theism" (1858).] but should limit themselves to
|
||
the task of working for the diffusion of Secularist principles.
|
||
They held that by following this policy the Secularists would not
|
||
only avoid engaging in an alien task, but would be able to
|
||
attract to the ranks of Secularism liberal-minded churchmen.
|
||
Bradlaugh and his supporters, however, took a widely different
|
||
view. Maintaining that the churches stood in the way of
|
||
Secularism, they held to be the task of the Secularists to do
|
||
everything possible to weaken their hold on the people.
|
||
["Reasoner," passim; "Investigator," passim; "National Reformer,"
|
||
passim; "Counsellor," November, 1861; "Freethinker," February 8,
|
||
1891; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake"
|
||
(1908), passim; G.J. Holyoake, "Sixty Years of an Agitator's
|
||
Life" (1892), I, 139, and II, 290-294; G.J. Holyoake, "Bygones
|
||
Worth Remembering" (1905), I, 18-19, and II, 98-101; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "Warpath of Opinion" (189?), p. 37; Hypatia Bradlaugh
|
||
Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), passim; G.J. Holyoake and
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh, "Secularism, Skepticism, and Atheism" (1870).]
|
||
|
||
In spite of their differences of opinion as to method, and
|
||
notwithstanding much talking and writing about those differences,
|
||
the Secularists of the early years went on working together, in a
|
||
more or less friendly spirit, for the Secular cause. Their lack
|
||
of agreement did, however, prevent them from getting together in
|
||
a national union, and the divergent viewpoints of the two
|
||
factions were reflected in the policy of the various Secularist
|
||
periodicals, as well as in the character of the activities of
|
||
Secularists.
|
||
|
||
At the outset of the Secularist controversy the supporters
|
||
of Holyoake constituted the bulk of the Secularist party, As the
|
||
years passed, however, more and more persons were attracted to
|
||
the point of view held by Bradlaugh; and by the end of the period
|
||
under consideration by far the greater portion of the Secularist
|
||
body shared his outlook. [John Watts, "Freethought: Its Advocacy
|
||
and Tendency," "National Reformer," May 28, 1865; G.W. Foote,
|
||
"George Jacob Holyoake." "Freethinker," February 12, 1893; Joseph
|
||
McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake (1908), I,
|
||
346.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
37
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER III
|
||
|
||
THE BRADLAUGH EPOCH
|
||
|
||
The triumph of the Bradlaugh viewpoint was paralleled by the
|
||
triumph, within the Secular Movement, of Bradlaugh himself. By
|
||
1866 he was the dominant personality among the Secularists, and
|
||
he remained such until 1890. His preeminence during the period
|
||
from 1866 to 1890 was so pronounced as to warrant the designation
|
||
of the era as the Bradlaugh Epoch. This period of Secularist
|
||
history stands apart from the years that preceded and those which
|
||
followed it, and forms a convenient unit for discussion.
|
||
|
||
ORGANIZATION
|
||
|
||
The very beginning of the new epoch saw the founding of the
|
||
National Secular Society, an association destined to endure
|
||
beyond the limits of the period. The Society was established by
|
||
Bradlaugh, who, taking advantage of the great popularity which he
|
||
had achieved among Secularists, as well as of the pronounced
|
||
lessening of the Secularist conflict which had made an earlier
|
||
union impossible, proclaimed the formation of the new enterprise
|
||
in September, 1866. [Charles Bradlaugh, "Secular Organization,"
|
||
"National Reformer," July 16, August 5 and 12, and September 2,
|
||
1866 and June 16, 1867; Charles Watts, "Secular Organization,"
|
||
"National Reformer," September 2, 1866.]
|
||
|
||
A "programme" for the new association laid down "objects"
|
||
and "principles" for its guidance. Its "objects" were asserted to
|
||
be:
|
||
|
||
"1st. To form an association for mutual help of all the
|
||
Freethinkers of Great Britain.
|
||
|
||
2nd. To conduct in the United Kingdom a more vigorous
|
||
Freethought propaganda, especially in districts where
|
||
Freethinkers are few and Freethought lectures are rare.
|
||
|
||
"3rd. To establish a fund for the assistance of aged or
|
||
distressed Freethinkers.
|
||
|
||
"4th. To provide parliamentary and other action in order to
|
||
remove all disabilities on account of religious opinions.
|
||
|
||
"5th. To establish Secular schools and adult instruction
|
||
classes in connection with every local society, having members
|
||
enough to efficiently support such schools or classes."
|
||
|
||
The "principles" of the new society were declared to be as
|
||
follows:
|
||
|
||
"I. This Association declares that the Promotion of Human
|
||
Improvement and Happiness is the highest duty.
|
||
|
||
"II. That the Theological Teachings of the World have been,
|
||
and are, most powerfully obstructive of human improvement and
|
||
happiness; human activity being guided and increased by a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
38
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
consciousness of the facts of existence; while it is misguided
|
||
and impeded in the most mischievous manner when the intellect is
|
||
prostrated by childish and absurd superstitions
|
||
|
||
"III. That in order to promote effectually the improvement
|
||
and happiness of mankind, every individual of the human family
|
||
ought to be well placed and well instructed; and all who are of
|
||
suitable age ought to be usefully employed for their own and the
|
||
general good.
|
||
|
||
"IV. That human improvement and happiness cannot be
|
||
effectually promoted without civil and religious liberty; and
|
||
that, therefore, it is the duty of every individual -- a duty to
|
||
be practically recognized by every member of this Association --
|
||
to actively attack all barriers to equal freedom of thought and
|
||
utterance for all, upon political and theological subjects."
|
||
|
||
An amplificatory statement issued in connection with the
|
||
"programme" declared that the fourth "object" aimed specifically
|
||
at the removal of "the blasphemy statutes, the oath-taking
|
||
practices, and the ecclesiastical disabilities." ["Proposed
|
||
Programme for the National Secular Society," "National Reformer,"
|
||
September 9, 1866; "National Secular Society," "National
|
||
Reformer," September 23, 1866.]
|
||
|
||
Statements of the principles and objects of the society
|
||
published in the six or eight years following 1866 included
|
||
features either not specifically mentioned in the foregoing
|
||
"programme" or not stated in it so explicitly. A description
|
||
issued in 1868 asserted that the "principle" calling for the
|
||
promotion of human improvement and happiness involved "the
|
||
promotion of political advancement by the political education and
|
||
enfranchisement of the masses" and the promotion of social
|
||
improvement by investigating and counteracting or preventing in
|
||
the future the causes of poverty and social degradation." And a
|
||
statement of 1874 called for the following:
|
||
|
||
"I. A system of really secular education, so that each child
|
||
may, at starting in life, be placed in a fair condition to form
|
||
more correct opinions, and be fitted for more useful conduct.
|
||
|
||
"2. The disestablishment and disendowment of the State
|
||
Church, and the placing of all religions and forms of speculative
|
||
opinion on a perfect equality before the law.
|
||
|
||
"3. Specially the improvement of the condition of the
|
||
Agricultural classes, whose terrible state of social degradation
|
||
is at present a fatal barrier to the formation of a good state of
|
||
society.
|
||
|
||
"4. A change in the Land Laws, so as to break down the
|
||
present system by which enormous estates are found in few hands,
|
||
the many having no interest in the soil, and to secure for the
|
||
agricultural laborer some share of the improvement in the land he
|
||
cultivates.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
39
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"5. The destruction of the present hereditary Chamber of
|
||
Peers, and substitution of a Senate containing life members,
|
||
elected for their fitness, and therewith the constitution of a
|
||
National Party, intended to wrest the governing power from a few
|
||
Whig and Tory families.
|
||
|
||
"6. The investigation of the cause of poverty in all old
|
||
countries, in order to see how far unequal distribution of wealth
|
||
or more radical causes may operate. The discussion in connection
|
||
with this of the various schemes for social amelioration, and the
|
||
ascertainment if possible of the laws governing the increase of
|
||
population and produce, and affecting the rise and fall of
|
||
wages." ["National Secular Society," "National Reformer,"
|
||
February 2, 1868; "The National Secular Society," "National
|
||
Reformer," June 14, 1874.]
|
||
|
||
Broadly speaking, the program thus gradually worked out
|
||
remained in effect until the very end of the Bradlaugh epoch; for
|
||
though it is true that in 1877 a fresh statement of "principles"
|
||
was issued for the society, and that still another was put out in
|
||
1886, these were substantially restatements of the basic ideas
|
||
with which the Secularists were already identified. [Annie
|
||
Besant, "Conference of the National Secular Society arid Other
|
||
Freethinkers," "National Reformer," May 27, 1877; "Annual
|
||
Conference of the National Secular Society," "National Reformer,"
|
||
June 20, 1886.]
|
||
|
||
The headquarters of the National Secular Society during the
|
||
era under consideration were in London, and its officers in the
|
||
period included a President, several Vice-Presidents, a
|
||
Secretary, a Treasurer, two Auditors, and members of a Council.
|
||
Except for the Councilors, each of whom was chosen by a local
|
||
Secular society, the officers were named at annual conferences of
|
||
Secularists. All officials were elected for one year and were
|
||
eligible for reelection. The President, the Vice-Presidents, the
|
||
Secretary, the Treasurer, the Council, and, after 1883, the
|
||
Auditors made up what was known as the Executive. The Executive
|
||
met each month, the President serving as Chairman, and all
|
||
voting. After 1877, members of the Council who resided more than
|
||
20 miles from the place of meeting of the Executive had the right
|
||
to be notified of the matters scheduled to come before the
|
||
Executive and to vote on such matters by letter. ["Officers of
|
||
the National Secular Society ... National Secular Society
|
||
Almanac" (1877), pp. 42-43, "National Reformer," September 9,
|
||
1866, to June 10, 1888, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Alongside the Executive of the National Secular Society in
|
||
the Bradlaugh era were the Secularist Annual Conferences.
|
||
Attended by the officers of the National Secular Society,
|
||
delegates of the local Secular bodies, and individual Secularists
|
||
of the rank and file, these meetings served as occasions for the
|
||
submission of reports, the discussion of finances, the
|
||
determination of policy, the adoption of resolutions, the
|
||
election of various officers, and disposition of any other
|
||
matters of business relevant to the Secular Movement. The
|
||
Conferences took place on Whitsunday and were held in London,
|
||
Manchester, Leeds, Birmingham, Sheffield, and other cities
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
40
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
throughout the country, the place of meeting being selected by
|
||
the Executive in the light of suggestions emanating from the
|
||
Secularist world. Voting at the Conferences ordinarily took place
|
||
by a show of hands; but upon occasions when such a vote was
|
||
challenged, voting by proxy was permitted. The Secularist
|
||
Conference was theoretically the dominant governing institution
|
||
within the Secular Movement. In actual practice, however, the
|
||
Conference was itself in large measure controlled by its
|
||
presiding officer, the President of the National Secular Society.
|
||
["National Reformer," September 29, 1867, to June 3, 1888,
|
||
passim.]
|
||
|
||
Affiliated with the National Secular Society in the period
|
||
under discussion were Secularist bodies of a local character.
|
||
Each local society had its own group of officials, including, in
|
||
general, a President, one or more Vice-Presidents, a Secretary, a
|
||
Treasurer, and a Committee. The officers of each branch were
|
||
elected by the members of that branch. Although the local
|
||
societies were bound by the principles of the National Secular
|
||
Society they enjoyed an autonomous status in the management of
|
||
their routine affairs. Secular local societies were to be found
|
||
in Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, Birmingham, London, Edinburgh,
|
||
Glasgow, and many lesser places. [The list of local societies
|
||
affiliated with the National Secular Society within the limits of
|
||
the Bradlaugh Epoch included the following:
|
||
|
||
London societies: Ball's Pond; Battersea; Bermondsey and
|
||
Rotherwithe; Bethnal Green; Brixton; Camberwell; Central London;
|
||
Clapham; Clerkenwell; Croyden; Crystal Palace District; Deptford;
|
||
East London; Edmonton; Finsbury; Forest Hill; Hackney; Holloway;
|
||
Hornsey Road; Hyde Park; Kensington and Hammersmith; Kilburn;
|
||
Kingston; Lewisham; Leytonstone; Milton Hall; Newington Hall; New
|
||
South Gate; North End; North Lambeth; North London; North
|
||
Middlesex; Northwest London; Oll South Gate; Paddington; Peckham
|
||
and Dulwich; Reading; South London, No. 1; South London, No. 2;
|
||
Southwest London; Stratford; Streatham; Tottenham; Walthamstow;
|
||
Walworth and Camberwell; West Central London; West Ham;
|
||
Westminster; Woolwich and Plumpstead.
|
||
|
||
Provincial societies: Aberdare; Aberdeen, Abersychan and
|
||
Talywain; Ashton-under-Lynne; Atherton and Tlydesley; Batham;
|
||
Banbury; Barnsley; Barrow-in-Farness; Batley; Bedlington;
|
||
Belfast; Berkshire; Bingley; Birkenbead; Birmingham; Bishop
|
||
Auckland; Blackburn; Black Hill; Blaydon-on-Tyne; Blyth; Baldon
|
||
Colliery; Bolton; Bootle And Kirkdale; Bradford; Brierly Hill;
|
||
Brigham; Brighouse; Brighton; Bristol; Brotton; Bryne and
|
||
District; Burnley; Burton-on-Trent; Bury; Canning Town; Cardiff;
|
||
Carlton; Chatham, Brompton and Rochester; Chesterle Street;
|
||
Cleremont Hall; Clay Cross; Congleton; Cork; Coventry;
|
||
Cramlington; Crewe; Dalton-en-Furness; Darlington; Darwen; Denby;
|
||
Derby; Dewsbury; Dublin; Dudley Colliery; Dunkenfield; Dundee;
|
||
Eaton and Normandy; Edinburgh; Failsworth; Farsley; Freckleton;
|
||
Gateshead; Glasgow; Gorton; Gravesend; Grays; Grimsby;
|
||
Grisborough; Halifax; Hamilton; Hanley and Tunstall; Hartlepool;
|
||
Halsingden; Haslington; Hastings; Hatton and Easington; Hawick;
|
||
Headingley and Burley; Heckmondwicke; Heywood; Holstead;
|
||
Houghtonle-Spring; Huddersfield; Hull; Hulme; Hyde; Hythe;
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
41
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Ilkeston; Innesleithen; Ipswich; Jarrow; Jersey; Kerriemuir;
|
||
Kettering; Kidderminster; Kilmarnock; Kingston; Kirby; Lancaster;
|
||
Larne; Leeds; Leek and Congleton; Leigh; Leicester; Lincoln;
|
||
Liverpool; Lofthouse; Low Fell; Longton; Maidstone; Manchester,
|
||
No. 1; Manchester, No. 2; Mansfield; Middlesborough; Mold;
|
||
Mossley; Newcastle-on-Tyne; Newcastle-under-Lynne; New
|
||
Herrington; Newport; Normanton; Northampton; North Shields; North
|
||
Woolwich; Norwich; Nottingham; Oldham; Old Shildon; Over Darwen;
|
||
Oxhill; Paisley; Pendlebury; Pendleton; Perth; Petersborough;
|
||
Plaistow; Plumstead; Plymouth, No. 1; Plymouth, No. 2; Pontypool;
|
||
Portsmouth; Preston; Ramsbottom; Reading; Renfrew; Richmond;
|
||
Rochdale; Rossendale; Rotherham; Saint Helen's; Seaham Harbor;
|
||
Seghill; Sheffield, No. 1; Sheffield, No, 2; Shildon; Shipley;
|
||
Shrewsbury; Silverdale; Skipton; South Durham; South Eston;
|
||
Southampton; South Shields; Sowerley Bridge; Spennymoor;
|
||
Staleybridge; Stockport; Stockton-on-Tees; Stourbridge;
|
||
Stowbridge; Strood; Sudbury; Sunderland; Sutton-in-Ashfield;
|
||
Swansea; Swindon; Three Towns; Tildersley; Todmorden; Tow Low;
|
||
Tunbridge and Tunbridge Wells; Uxbridge; Wakefield; Walkerburn;
|
||
Walsend; Walsingham; Walthimstow; Walworth; Washington and
|
||
Usworth: Wednesbury; Wellingborough; West Auckland; West Bromwich
|
||
and District; West Gorton; West Hartlepool; White Haven; Wigan;
|
||
Willesden; Wolsingham; Wolverhampton; Wood Green; York.
|
||
|
||
"National Reformer," passim; "Freethinker," passim;
|
||
"National Secular Society's Almanac" for various years.]
|
||
|
||
The membership of the National Secular Society during the
|
||
Bradlaugh epoch also embraced scattered individuals not belonging
|
||
to any of the branches. ["Conference of the National Secular
|
||
Society," "National Reformer," December 1, 1867.]
|
||
|
||
From time to time in the era under consideration local
|
||
Secular bodies within given regions formed district organizations
|
||
for the purpose of promoting the exchange of lecturers among the
|
||
societies cooperating in such enterprises. These regional
|
||
associations had their own officers -- ordinarily a President, a
|
||
Secretary, a Treasurer, and a Committee -- and held "Annual
|
||
Conferences." Although from first to last a rather large number
|
||
of district unions were formed, they were very generally short-
|
||
lived institutions; and they naturally played no part in shaping
|
||
the course of the Secular Movement. Typical of the sectional
|
||
federations were the Manchester and District Secular Union, the
|
||
North of England Secular Propaganda Association, the Secular
|
||
Union for South Durham and North Yorkshire, the Yorkshire Secular
|
||
Lecturing Circuit, and the Northeastern Secular Federation. [The
|
||
list of unions in existence at one time or another during the
|
||
Bradlaugh era included also the following: the Lancashire Secular
|
||
Union, the Birmingham and Midland Secular Union, the Midland
|
||
Counties Secular Association, the West of England and South Wales
|
||
Secular Union, the Kent Secular Union, the Scottish Secular
|
||
Union, the Yorkshire Secular Lecturing Circuit, the Yorkshire
|
||
West Riding Secular Lecturing Circuit, the Midland Amalgamated
|
||
Secular Union, the Northern District Secular Association, the
|
||
London Secular Federation, the Northern Secular Federation, the
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
42
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
North Middlesex Secular Federation, the Yorkshire Secular
|
||
Federation, the Lancashire Secular Federation; the Lancashire and
|
||
Yorkshire Secular Federation, the Northern Federation of National
|
||
Secular Society Branches, and possibly others.
|
||
|
||
"National Reformer," passim; "Freethinker," passim.
|
||
|
||
Two or three such organizations arose near the end of the
|
||
preceding Secularist era. "National Reformer," 1861-1865.]
|
||
|
||
All local Secular bodies did not affiliate themselves with
|
||
the National Secular Society immediately upon its formation.
|
||
Those which did not elect at once to attach themselves to the
|
||
national organization nevertheless adhered to the principles of
|
||
Secularism, and, generally speaking, participated in the District
|
||
Unions and, to some degree, in the Annual Conferences. As the
|
||
years passed, one by one of these non-affiliating local groups
|
||
joined the National Secular Society. By the end of the period of
|
||
Secularist history now under consideration, very nearly all such
|
||
bodies had become members. [The Leicester Secular Society, which
|
||
remained attached to the Holyoake viewpoint, never became a
|
||
member of the National Secular Society. Possibly one or two other
|
||
societies remained permanently aloof.
|
||
|
||
"National Reformer," passim; "Freethinker," passim;
|
||
"National Secular Society's Almanac" for various years; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "Warpath of Opinion" (189?), p. 61.]
|
||
|
||
For a brief portion of the Bradlaugh era there was in
|
||
existence outside the National Secular Society a Secularist
|
||
organization which, was not exactly local in character -- the
|
||
British Secular Union. This association arose in 1877 after
|
||
differences later to be explained had arisen between Bradlaugh
|
||
and Charles Watts and between Bradlaugh and Holyoake over legal
|
||
difficulties growing out of the sale of birth-control literature.
|
||
The society was founded by Holyoake and Watts. It had as officers
|
||
a Council, a Secretary, a Treasurer, and in 1881 and possibly
|
||
afterwards, a President. In its name Annual Conferences were
|
||
held. The program adopted by the association embraced the
|
||
principles of Secularism, but eschewed theological criticism. The
|
||
British Secular Union proclaimed itself a national body, and
|
||
announced the formation of a number of branches. It was never
|
||
able, however, to get on its feet, and its leaders presently
|
||
abandoned it. It died in 1884. ["In the course of the life, of
|
||
the British Secular Union, a branch existed at each of the
|
||
following places: London, Glasgow, Kingston, Leeds,
|
||
Kidderminster. Sheffield, Hull, Liverpool, Manchester,
|
||
Nottingham, Bradford, and Huddersfield.
|
||
|
||
"Secular Review and Secularist," August 25 to December 15,
|
||
1877, passim; "British Secular Almanac" for years; 1879 to 1883;
|
||
"National Reformer." 18791885, passim; Joseph McCabe, "Life and
|
||
Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 90 and 86.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
43
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
LEADERS
|
||
|
||
As has been seen, the foremost individual among the
|
||
Secularists of the period from 1866 to 1890 was Bradlaugh. Except
|
||
for one year, [In 1871 Arthur Trevelyan, a financial benefactor
|
||
of the National Secular Society, was elected President. "National
|
||
Secular Society's Conference at Birmingham, National Reformer,"
|
||
October 1, 1871.] he served as President of the National Secular
|
||
Society throughout the entire period; and he applied to the work
|
||
an energy and a resourcefulness not possessed by any of his
|
||
fellow secularists." ["Conference of the National Secular
|
||
Society" or equivalent title), "National Reformer," 1867-1890.]
|
||
But Bradlaugh was by no means the only distinguished personality.
|
||
Holyoake, though now less active in the Secular Movement than in
|
||
former years, remained associated with it, and not only at one
|
||
time held office as Vice-President of the National Secular
|
||
Society, but later served on the Council of the short-lived
|
||
British Secular Union. ["National Reformer," 1869-1890, passim;
|
||
G.W. Foote, "George Jacob Holyoake," "Freethinker," January 28,
|
||
1906.] There were also others, notably Mrs. Annie Besant,
|
||
Charles Watts, Dr. Edward Bibbins Aveling, George William Foote,
|
||
and John Mackinnon Robertson.
|
||
|
||
Annie Besant was truly an extraordinary asset to the Secular
|
||
Movement. She devoted an astonishing amount of energy to the work
|
||
of diffusing Secular principles, and her industry was accompanied
|
||
by pronounced enthusiasm for the cause. At the same time, she
|
||
possessed in easy control of language that gave her great
|
||
effectiveness on the platform. In commenting upon her ability as
|
||
a speaker H.M. Hyndman once declared: "It is doubtful whether any
|
||
woman of our time has had the oratorical faculty and power of
|
||
rousing and dominating an audience to the extent which Annie
|
||
Besant at her best possessed it. [H. M. Hyndman, "Further
|
||
Reminiscences" (1912), p. 4.] Her personal qualities, too, were
|
||
invaluable. She was endowed with sensitiveness and good taste,
|
||
and her manner was unusually agreeable. Thanks to her finely
|
||
proportioned features, her expressive brown eyes, and her
|
||
abundant, dark, glossy hair, she was also unusually attractive in
|
||
appearance. It is little wonder that she was a colleague in whom
|
||
the Secularists took great pride.
|
||
|
||
The birthplace of Annie Besant was London, where her father,
|
||
W.P.B. Wood, though a medical graduate of Dublin University, had
|
||
accepted an attractive commercial position; but in 1852, when
|
||
Annie was 5 years old, the father died, and Mrs, Wood soon
|
||
afterwards took her two children to live in Harrow, for the
|
||
purpose at once of earning a living by keeping in her home boy
|
||
students and educating her son at the school.
|
||
|
||
The opportunity for Annie's education came a little later
|
||
when Annie met a Miss Marryatt at a neighbor's house. Miss
|
||
Marryatt, who used a portion of her considerable wealth to
|
||
educate various children, provided training for Annie over a
|
||
period of seven years, allowing her to return to Harrow during
|
||
vacations but caring for her during school terms. For five of the
|
||
seven years Miss Marryatt lodged Annie at her house near the
|
||
village of Charmouth in Dorsetshire. Later she took the girl for
|
||
two extended sojourns on the Continent and for a winter in
|
||
London.
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
44
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Upon the completion of her educational training, in 1863,
|
||
Annie returned to Harrow, where, for the next three years, her
|
||
chief interest was in religion. She had been reared an Anglican
|
||
and in 1862 had been confirmed at Paris by the visiting Bishop of
|
||
Ohio. Since childhood she had been deeply religious. Now, in her
|
||
middle teens, her religious fervor became so intense that she
|
||
yearned to sacrifice herself in the service of Christ.
|
||
|
||
On a visit, in 1866, to her grandfather's in Clapham, Annie
|
||
Wood met the man whom she was to marry -- Frank Besant, a young
|
||
Cambridge graduate who had just taken holy orders and who was
|
||
serving temporarily as deacon in a newly-opened mission church at
|
||
Clapham. The wedding took place in 1867, after the Rev. Besant
|
||
had removed to Cheltenham, and the couple resided first at
|
||
Cheltenham and later at Sibsey.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, Annie Besant abandoned her orthodoxy. As early as
|
||
1866 a shadow of doubt appeared before her mind when, in
|
||
anticipation of Easter, she studied the four gospel accounts of
|
||
Christ's last week on earth and found discrepancies. She managed
|
||
to revive her faith after this experience, but the memory of the
|
||
episode remained, and in 1871 a long and painful illness
|
||
undergone by her daughter raised a question in her mind as to the
|
||
mercy of God. At the same time, wide religious reading, made
|
||
possible by her sheltered role as a clergyman's wife, undermined
|
||
her confidence in revealed teaching in general. The outcome was
|
||
that she became a thoroughgoing Freethinker.
|
||
|
||
During much of this time the relations of Mrs. Besant with
|
||
her husband had been growing increasingly strained. Physical and
|
||
temperamental incompatibility, accompanied by difficulties
|
||
growing out of the changes in Mrs. Besant's religious opinions,
|
||
caused such a breach that in October, 1873, Mrs. Besant procured
|
||
a legal separation.
|
||
|
||
For several months before the separation occurred Mrs.
|
||
Besant had been actively interested in anti-theological
|
||
propaganda. Though her activity in this direction was essentially
|
||
an outcome of her religious evolution, it was precipitated by her
|
||
acquaintance with Thomas Scott, who financed the publication,
|
||
month by month, of heretical pamphlets. She had been introduced
|
||
to Scott, in 1872, by the liberal clergyman Charles Voysey, to
|
||
whom she had made herself known after hearing one of his sermons
|
||
when on a visit to the home of her mother, who was now living in
|
||
London. Scott invited Mrs. Besant to submit to him an essay for
|
||
publication. She did so, and he published it anonymously in the
|
||
spring of 1873. [The pamphlet was entitled "On the Deity of
|
||
Jesus of Nazareth. An Enquiry into the Nature of Jesus by an
|
||
Examination of the Synoptic Gospels," and was followed by a
|
||
companion treatise bearing the title "According to St. John." "On
|
||
the Deity of Jesus of Nazareth. Part II. A Comparison Between the
|
||
Fourth Gospel and the Three Synoptics." The title page of the
|
||
pamphlets bore the words "By the Wife a Beneficed Clergyman."]
|
||
In the ensuing months she published anonymously through Scott
|
||
several additional pamphlets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
45
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Besant about this time left Sibsey for London. While
|
||
studying in the metropolis, at the British Museum, she became
|
||
aware of the publishing firm of Edward Truelove, and on visiting
|
||
the Truelove shop on an errand, in the summer of 1874, she
|
||
chanced to see a copy of the National Reformer. From it she
|
||
learned of the existence and general character of the National
|
||
Secular Society. She was strongly impressed by the association,
|
||
and, after further inquiry, became one of its members.
|
||
|
||
Pending the completion of the pamphlets begun anonymously
|
||
for Thomas Scott, Mrs. Besant published such Secularist writings
|
||
as she produced under a nom de plume -- "Ajax," suggested by the
|
||
statue, "Ajax Crying for Light," in the Crystal Palace -- and
|
||
refrained from going on the Secularist platform. Before many
|
||
months had passed, however, she plunged into lecturing and began
|
||
to sign her writings in her own name. [Annie Besant, "Annie
|
||
Besant" (1893), pp, 11-180; Geoffrey West, "The Life of Annie
|
||
Besant" (1929), pp. 7-80; Gertrude Marvin Williams, "The
|
||
Passionate Pilgrim" (1931), pp. 3-60; A.S. Headingley, "Biography
|
||
of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 159-162.]
|
||
|
||
The value of Annie Besant to the Secularist cause was
|
||
speedily recognized by the Secularists, and from 1875 onward she
|
||
was elected year after year as a Vice-President of the National
|
||
Secular Society. Bradlaugh himself, as will presently be seen,
|
||
placed important responsibilities upon her in connection with the
|
||
National Reformer, and she and Bradlaugh worked as close
|
||
associates in the Movement. ["Conference of the National Secular
|
||
Society" (or equivalent title), "National Reformer," 1876-1889.]
|
||
|
||
Efficient work was being done by Charles Watts before Mrs.
|
||
Besant became affiliated with the National Secular Society. Watts
|
||
possessed the gift of eloquence, and was also fond of debate, at
|
||
which he excelled. His effectiveness on the platform was
|
||
increased at once by a distinguished bearing and a genial
|
||
personality. As a writer Watts was the master of a lucid,
|
||
convincing style. His writings and lectures alike reflected a
|
||
humanitarianism that was contagious.
|
||
|
||
Charles Watts, younger brother of John Watts, was born at
|
||
Bristol in 1836. The son of a Wesleyan minister, he was reared in
|
||
a religious atmosphere and early became a Sunday school teacher.
|
||
In the early 1850's Charles took two momentous steps. He left
|
||
Bristol for London and he gave up his religious orthodoxy. It is
|
||
not surprising, under these circumstances, to find him occupying
|
||
in 1860 a position with the National Reformer. In 1864 he was
|
||
promoted from the post of printer to that of sub-editor, and in
|
||
the same year he began to appear on the Secularist platform. When
|
||
the National Secular Society came into existence he became
|
||
affiliated with it, and, besides continuing editorial work and
|
||
lecturing, served it for a number of years in the capacity of
|
||
Secretary and Vice-President. Subsequently, for a time, he was
|
||
active with the British Secular Union. The connection of Charles
|
||
Watts with the English Secular Movement, as will be seen, was
|
||
interrupted in the later years of the Bradlaugh era, and was not
|
||
resumed until after Bradlaugh's death; but this interruption did
|
||
not occur until after Watts had rendered energetic service to the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
46
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
cause over a number of years. [William Stewart Ross, "Sketch of
|
||
the Life and Character of C. Watts" (188?); "National Reformer,"
|
||
March 5, 1864, to June 11, 1876, passim; "Freethinker," July 22,
|
||
1894, and February 25, 1906; William Kent, "London for Heretics"
|
||
(1932), pp. 72-74; D.M. Bennett, "The World's Sages, Infidels,
|
||
and Thinkers" (1876), pp. 1004-1005: "Watts (Charles),"
|
||
"Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers," (1889), by J.M.
|
||
Wheeler.]
|
||
|
||
Edward B. Aveling not only possessed wide scientific
|
||
knowledge, but was a competent writer, a forceful lecturer, and a
|
||
splendid teacher. His moral nature was not so well developed. He
|
||
was capable of rendering diligent service to the cause he deemed
|
||
to be a good one, even at the risk of great sacrifice to himself;
|
||
but in financial and personal relationships he displayed a
|
||
laxness that ultimately gave him an unenviable reputation among
|
||
his associates.
|
||
Whatever may have been Aveling's effect upon the fortunes of the
|
||
Secular Movement, it is a fact that he gave impetus to the
|
||
intellectual aspects of its program.
|
||
|
||
The son of a Congregational minister, Aveling was born in
|
||
1851. He was educated at Taunton and London Universities. From
|
||
the latter institution he received the degree of Doctor of
|
||
Science. He also taught science at the University of London for
|
||
several years. Through Bradlaugh's daughters, who had enrolled as
|
||
students at the London University, he met Bradlaugh and Mrs.
|
||
Besant, and in 1879 he became identified with the Secular
|
||
Movement.
|
||
|
||
As a Secularist Aveling rose rapidly. In 1880 and subsequent
|
||
years he was elected Vice-President of the National Secular
|
||
Society, and he was soon taking a leading part in various phases
|
||
of the work. His affiliation with the Secular Movement did not,
|
||
however, long endure. In 1884 he joined the camp of the
|
||
Socialists and disappeared from the Secularist scene. [Annie
|
||
Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), pp. 246 and 249; Henry S. Salt,
|
||
"Seventy Years Among Savages" (1921), pp. 80-81; Frederick
|
||
Rogers, "Labour, Life, and Literature" (1913), pp. 175-177; D.M.
|
||
Bennett, "An Infidel Abroad" (1881), pp, 784-785; H.M. Hyndman,
|
||
"Record of an Adventurous Life" (1911), pp. 262, 309, and 388;
|
||
H.M. Hyndman, "Further Reminiscences (1912), pp. 140-147;
|
||
Gertrude Marvin Williams, "The Passionate Pilgrim" (1931), pp.
|
||
109-110, 121, 132, 138-148; "National Reformer," August 3. 1879,
|
||
to September 7, 1884, passim; "Freethinker," June 10, 1883, and
|
||
July 13, 1884.]
|
||
|
||
G.W. Foote was intellectually inclined, and through
|
||
persistent reading and thinking became a man of genuine culture.
|
||
At the same time he was intensely devoted to the principles to
|
||
which he gave his allegiance, and fought relentlessly in their
|
||
behalf. In doing so he wielded with equal effectiveness the
|
||
weapons of scholarship and logic and those of wit, satire, and
|
||
ridicule. Thus it is accurate to characterize Foote as a hard-
|
||
hitting scholar.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
47
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Foote was born in 1850 at Plymouth. In 1868 he settled in
|
||
London. Before going to London he had, as a consequence of
|
||
reading, abandoned the orthodox religious teachings to which he
|
||
had adhered as a boy, and soon after arriving in the metropolis
|
||
he associated himself with organized Secularism,
|
||
|
||
In the Secular Movement Foote was active as an organizer,
|
||
lecturer, and writer. Though starting out with the National
|
||
Secular Society, he became identified with the British Secular
|
||
Union in 1877; but he soon returned to the National Secular
|
||
Society, and from 1882 onward through the Bradlaugh era served as
|
||
one of its Vice-PresidentS. ["Foote (George William),"
|
||
"Biographical Dictatory of Freethinkers" (1889), by J.M. Wheeler;
|
||
"Foote, George William," "Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists" (1920), by Joseph McCabe; Robert Flint, "Anti-
|
||
Theistic Theories" (1880), I,. 512; "Freethinker," July 1, 1883,
|
||
and May 15, 1898; "Truth Seeker," August, 1899.]
|
||
|
||
J.M. Robertson was one of the ablest individuals attracted
|
||
to the Secular Movement. He was also a man of sterling character,
|
||
and he wrote and spoke with fidelity to his conception of truth.
|
||
Though not the equal of Bradlaugh or Annie Besant as a popular
|
||
propagandist, his scholarly endeavors were a valuable asset to
|
||
the Secularist cause, especially in the fields of practical
|
||
reform and Freethought agitation.
|
||
|
||
Robertson was born in the Island of Arran on November 14,
|
||
1856. He attended school only to the age of 13, but subsequently
|
||
read widely on his own initiative. In 1878 he joined the staff of
|
||
the Edinburgh Evening News as feature writer. After moving toward
|
||
skeptical religious views by means of his own thought and
|
||
reading, he was made into a thoroughgoing Freethinker through
|
||
hearing Bradlaugh deliver a lecture at Edinburgh on Bruno. He
|
||
afterwards became actively connected with the Edinburgh branch of
|
||
the National Secular Society, and in 1884 went to London to
|
||
accept the sub-editorship of the 'National Reformer.' Besides
|
||
writing in the 'National Reformer' in the later years of the
|
||
Bradlaugh era, he lectured for Secularist societies. [J.M.
|
||
Robertson, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), Pt. two, pp. 142-143;
|
||
Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), pp. 285-286; Gertrude Marvin
|
||
Williams, "The Passionate Pilgrim" (1931), pp. 151-152;
|
||
"Robertson, Rt. Hon. John Mackinnon." "Who's Who" (British)
|
||
(1932); "National Reformer," October 12, 1884, to February 8,
|
||
1891, passim; "Freethinker," January 15 and 22, 1933.]
|
||
|
||
PUBLICATIONS
|
||
|
||
The Secularists of the Bradlaugh epoch produced and
|
||
distributed a great deal of propagandist literature, as the early
|
||
Secularists had done. For one thing, they continued the practice
|
||
of issuing magazines. One of the journals they put out -- namely,
|
||
the National Reformer -- had been founded, as we have seen, in
|
||
the earlier period. Bradlaugh, who had edited the paper
|
||
throughout the greater part of its existence in the former era,
|
||
continued as its sole editor until 1877. In that year Annie
|
||
Besant became co-editor with Bradlaugh. The co-editorship lasted
|
||
until 1887, when, for reasons which will be explained, Bradlaugh
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
48
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
once more became sole editor. The policies of the 'National
|
||
Reformer' throughout the Bradlaugh era remained what they had
|
||
been from the first appearance of the journal. The paper
|
||
continued to be issued weekly. ["National Reformer," all
|
||
numbers; Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), p. 180; Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), 11, 15 and 87.]
|
||
|
||
The periodicals originating in the Bradlaugh era included
|
||
the Reasoner, the Secular Chronicle,, the Secularist, the Secular
|
||
Review, the Liberal, the Freethinker, and the Present Day.
|
||
|
||
The Reasoner was founded by Holyoake in 1871. It represented
|
||
an attempt to revive the periodical of the same name which had
|
||
passed out of existence in 1861. The new journal adopted the
|
||
viewpoint of the earlier paper. It was issued monthly. The
|
||
venture was not a success. Because of an inadequate circulation
|
||
the paper died in July of the year following its birth. [The new
|
||
"Reasoner" was printed by the Manchester Co-operative Society,
|
||
and half the space of the paper was devoted to cooperation.
|
||
|
||
Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake"
|
||
(1909), II, 58-59,]
|
||
|
||
The Secular Chronicle was issued in Birmingham, and combined
|
||
advocacy of Secularist principles with opposition to theology. It
|
||
was founded in 1872 by a young man named C.H. Reddels. In 1875
|
||
Redders died, and the paper was taken over by Mrs. Harriet Law,
|
||
who had energetically spent many years as a Secularist lecturer.
|
||
From Mrs. Law the journal passed to one George Standring.
|
||
Starting as a monthly publication, the paper was converted into a
|
||
weekly organ in 1875; but in 1878 it again began to appear
|
||
monthly. From the first the Secular Chronicle failed to pay its
|
||
way, and in 1879 its existence was brought to a close. [Secular
|
||
Chronicle," passim; "National Reformer," December 11, 1870, to
|
||
April 6, 1879, passim; "Freethinker," August 1, 1897, to June 5.
|
||
1898, passim; "Law, Mrs. Harriet," "Biographical Dictionary of
|
||
Modern Rationalists" (1920), by Joseph McCabe.]
|
||
|
||
The fortunes of the Secularist and the Secular Review were
|
||
closely linked together. The Secularist, which was issued weekly,
|
||
was launched as a joint enterprise by Holyoake and Foote at the
|
||
beginning of January, 1876, and represented the Secularist
|
||
viewpoint associated with the name of Holyoake. The two editors
|
||
of the paper speedily developed personal differences, however,
|
||
with the result that within less than two months Holyoake
|
||
withdrew, leaving the concern solely in the hands of Foote. After
|
||
severing his connection with the Secularist, Holyoake started, in
|
||
the same year, the Secular Review, a weekly journal expressive of
|
||
the Holyoake outlook. But in February, 1877, Holyoake, who was in
|
||
frail health, relinquished the editorship of the Secular Review
|
||
and turned it over to Charles Watts, after Watts had been
|
||
dismissed by Bradlaugh, for reasons which will be explained, from
|
||
a position as sub-editor of the National Reformer. When the
|
||
British Secular Union came into existence, the Secular Review
|
||
became identified with it. Likewise, Foote, who had left the
|
||
National Secular Society and become affiliated with the British
|
||
Secular Union, brought the Secularist into the camp of the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
49
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
British Secular Union. In the summer of 1877 the two papers were
|
||
amalgamated to form the Secular Review and Secularist, with Watts
|
||
and Foote as joint editors. Foote before long withdrew from the
|
||
project, and the Secular Review and Secularist became simply the
|
||
Secular Review, with Watts as sole editor. Shortly afterwards
|
||
Watts associated with himself in the editorship an impassioned
|
||
writer, William Stewart Ross, who wrote under the name of
|
||
"Saladin." With the failure of the British Secular Union in 1884
|
||
Watts gave up the journal to Ross, who changed its name and
|
||
carried it out of the Secular Movement. ["Secularist," all
|
||
numbers; "Secular Review and Secularist," all numbers; Secular
|
||
Review," passim; "Agnostic Journal and Electric Review," passim;
|
||
William Stewart Ross, "Sketch of the Life and Character of
|
||
Charles Watts" (1877), pp. 5-6; "The Secular Review," "British
|
||
Secular Almanac for 1882," p. 32; Joseph McCabe, "Life and
|
||
Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), 11, 79, 85-87, 142-143
|
||
and 343; "National Reformer," January 9 to December 31, 1876;
|
||
"Freethinker,"; July 29, 1883, May 15, 1888, and December 9,
|
||
1906; "Foote (George William)" and "Ross (William Stewart)"
|
||
"Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers" (1889), by J.M.
|
||
Wheeler; "Foote, George William," "Watts, Charles," and "Ross,
|
||
William Stewart," "Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists" (1920), by Joseph McCabe.]
|
||
|
||
The Liberal, a monthly journal founded by Foote at the
|
||
beginning of 1879, emphasized the principles of Secularism, but
|
||
also contained anti-religious agitation. The, paper was
|
||
unsuccessful and died within a year. [G.W. Foote, "Joseph
|
||
Mazzini Wheeler," "Freethinker," May 15, 1898; Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
"Rough Notes National Reformer," November 24 and December 8,
|
||
1878; "Foote (George William)" "Biographical Dictionary of
|
||
Freethinkers" (1889), by J.M. Wheeler.]
|
||
|
||
The Freethinker was established in 1881 by Foote, who
|
||
returned to the National Secular Society and identified the paper
|
||
with it. The Freethinker, though supporting the Secularist
|
||
principles, gave chief attention to agitation against theology.
|
||
The paper was militant in tone and made free use of satire and
|
||
ridicule. Foote edited it throughout the later Bradlaugh era,
|
||
except for a brief period, beginning in 1883 and ending in 1884,
|
||
when, as will be seen, he was undergoing imprisonment for
|
||
blasphemy. During that interval it was edited successively by
|
||
J.M. Wheeler, the former sub-editor, and, upon Wheeler's mental
|
||
breakdown, by Aveling. The paper was started as a monthly
|
||
publication; but with the issue of September 4, 1881, it began to
|
||
appear weekly. The "Freethinker" soon took its place as one of
|
||
the principal Secularist journals of the period. ["Freethinker,"
|
||
all numbers; "National Reformer," April 17 and October 9, 1881,
|
||
and March 18, 1893.]
|
||
|
||
The 'Present Day,' a monthly organ, was established by
|
||
Holyoake in 1883 and constituted one more effort to further by
|
||
journalistic means the Secularist policy which Holyoake
|
||
championed. But the paper was no more successful than Holyoake's
|
||
periodicals in the earlier years of the Bradlaugh era had been,
|
||
and in 1886 it was abandoned. [Edward B. Aveling, "Mr. Holyoake
|
||
and Freethought," "Freethinker," June 17, 1883; Joseph McCabe,
|
||
"Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 148-150
|
||
and 344.]
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
50
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
In addition to journals, non-periodical literature
|
||
enunciating Secularist and anti-religious principles was issued
|
||
in great quantities. Many of the works put out were written by
|
||
persons affiliated with the Secular Movement; but there were some
|
||
from the pens of others -- such as Thomas Paine's 'Age of
|
||
Reason,' Robert Ingersoll's lectures, Voltaire's Philosophical
|
||
Dictionary, Renan's 'Life of Jesus,' and John Morley's
|
||
'Rousseau.' The literature was generally sold at low prices; but
|
||
considerable portions of it were distributed gratuitously. In a
|
||
single year 48,000 tracts were granted by the Executive of the
|
||
National Secular Society for free distribution by the London
|
||
branches having open-air meetings. ["National Reformer,"
|
||
1966-1890, passim; "British Secular Union Almanac for 1879"
|
||
(1878), p. 45.]
|
||
|
||
The distribution of Secularist literature was facilitated by
|
||
firms operated by Secularists of London. One such enterprise was
|
||
the printing and publishing establishment which had been carried
|
||
on by Austin Holyoake in the latter part of the preceding
|
||
Secularist era. Austin Holyoake continued to conduct the
|
||
undertaking in the Bradlaugh period until his death in 1874, when
|
||
it was purchased by the Secularists for and on behalf of Charles
|
||
Watts. It was carried on by Watts for the next several years. The
|
||
concern received a blow in 1877 when (as will be explained)
|
||
Bradlaugh became displeased with Watts and withdrew his patronage
|
||
from it. Watts associated the business, however, with the British
|
||
Secular Union and kept it going until the Secular Union failed in
|
||
1884, when he turned it over to his son Charles A. Watts. Young
|
||
Watts terminated its affiliation with the Secular Movement.
|
||
Besides the Holyoake-Watts concern, there existed also, after
|
||
1877, the Freethought Publishing Company. This was a partnership
|
||
formed by Bradlaugh and Mrs. Besant after Bradlaugh had broken
|
||
off all business relations with Watts. The establishment was
|
||
located at 28 Stonecutter Street for some years, but in 1882
|
||
attractive and convenient premises were secured at 63 Fleet
|
||
Street. The Bradlaugh-Besant firm served the Secular cause
|
||
throughout the later years of the Bradlaugh Era and, as will be
|
||
seen, even afterwards for a short time." [William Stewart Ross,
|
||
"Sketch of the Life and Character of C. Watts," p. 7; "National
|
||
Reformer," April 26, 1874, to December 21, 1890, passim; "British
|
||
Secular Almanac for 1883" (1882), pp. 1-2; Hypatia Bradlaugh
|
||
Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), 1, 12-17, and II, 17 and 100;
|
||
Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake"
|
||
(1908), 70, 80, and 81; Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), p.
|
||
285.]
|
||
|
||
MEETINGS
|
||
|
||
Like the early Secularists, the Secularists of the Bradlaugh
|
||
era held assemblages of one sort or another. These included
|
||
regular Sunday meetings, debates, and outdoor exercises.
|
||
|
||
At the Sunday meetings, held in Secular halls, the central
|
||
feature was the lecture. Every phase of the Secularist program
|
||
was discussed by the lecturers, and so the list of titles ranged
|
||
from "Secularism, the Gospel of Progress" to "The Mosaic
|
||
Cosmogony and Science," and from "Woman: Her Natural Position in
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
51
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Society, and Her Influence for Good and Evil" to "1793, 1832, and
|
||
1867." Often the lecturers were local speakers, but frequently
|
||
exchanges of lectures were arranged by the various district
|
||
organizations, and from time to time Bradlaugh, Annie Besant,
|
||
Foote, Holyoake, Charles Watts, and other Secularist leaders went
|
||
on lecturing tours throughout the country. The group of prominent
|
||
lecturers included, in addition to these leaders, Mrs. Harriet
|
||
Law, John Maughan, Thomas Slater, W.J. Ramsey, Touzeau Parris,
|
||
E.B. Aveling, Arthur B. Moss, J.M. Robertson, Mrs. Thornton
|
||
Smith, and G. Standring. The lecture at the Sunday meeting was
|
||
followed by a general discussion of the topic treated by the
|
||
lecturer. Opportunity was given at this time for criticism of the
|
||
lecture by persons in the audience; and critical remarks were
|
||
replied to by the lecturer. These post-lecture discussions were
|
||
often the occasion for spirited exchanges of verbal blows, and
|
||
constituted a popular feature of the Secularist meetings. Many
|
||
societies supplemented the lectures and discussions with vocal
|
||
and instrumental music. This took the form of hymns. The songs
|
||
rendered were expressive of Secularist belief and sentiment. Thus
|
||
some were devoted to the praise of freedom, or truth, or
|
||
friendship, or "brave reformers." Others urged defense of the
|
||
weak and desolate or obedience to the laws of nature. Still
|
||
others denounced poverty or suffering or extolled science, work,
|
||
or hope. All directly or indirectly inculcated that basic Secular
|
||
principle of self-help which one of them explicitly called for in
|
||
these words:
|
||
|
||
People throughout the land,
|
||
Join in one social band,
|
||
And save yourselves;
|
||
If you would happy be,
|
||
Free from all slavery,
|
||
Banish all knavery,
|
||
And save yourselves.
|
||
|
||
The songs used by the Secularists were written by Whittier,
|
||
Shelley, Longfellow, Shakespeare, Lowell, Swinburne, Milton,
|
||
Carlyle, and many others, including Annie Besant. ["National
|
||
Reformer" 1866-1890, passim; "Freethinker," 1881-1890, passim;
|
||
"National Secular Society's Almanac" (1881), p. 48, and (1886),
|
||
p. 42-47; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894),
|
||
I, 53 and 238-251; "Secular Review and Secularist," September 22,
|
||
1870, and November 3 and 10, 1877; Annie Besant, "Annie Besant"
|
||
(1893), pp. 191-201.]
|
||
|
||
To facilitate the use of music in connection with Secularist
|
||
meetings Austin Holyoake and Charles Watts edited a Secular hymn
|
||
book. The volume appeared in 1871 and was entitled 'The
|
||
Secularist's Manual of Songs and Ceremonies.' It contained,
|
||
besides a statement of the principles of Secularism and other
|
||
matters, more than 100 original and selected songs. An improved
|
||
collection of hymns, authorized by the National Secular Society,
|
||
was edited by Annie Besant in 1875 under the title 'The Secular
|
||
Song and Hymn Book.' The new work contained words only, and not
|
||
musical notes, but the pieces included in it fitted designated
|
||
tunes appearing in Hymns Ancient and Modern, a popular Christian
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
52
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
hymnal. A second edition of the work came out in 1876. [Annie
|
||
Besant, Editor, "The Secular Song and Hymn Book" (Second
|
||
Edition), 1876; "National Reformer," July 30, 1971, December 19,
|
||
1875, and May 31, 1885.]
|
||
|
||
Debates between Secularists and persons opposed to
|
||
Secularism were looked upon by the Secularists as golden
|
||
opportunities for spreading the principles of Secularism and
|
||
discrediting theological teachings, and were arranged on every
|
||
possible occasion. Though the Secularists courted debates with
|
||
any and all comers, their opponents were ordinarily clergymen or
|
||
other representatives of organized religion -- Anglicans,
|
||
Congregationalists, Methodists, Unitarians, Christadelphians,
|
||
Catholics, and possibly others. The following titles of debates
|
||
are typical: 'Is Christianity the Best System for the Promotion
|
||
of Human Happiness?"; "Are the Principles of Secularism the Best
|
||
Adapted to Promote the Happiness of the Human Race?"; "Are the
|
||
evidences adduced by Christians in support of the writings known
|
||
as the 'Bible,' sufficient to warrant their being received and
|
||
proclaimed as the word of God?"; and "Is Secularism the True
|
||
Gospel for Mankind?" Quite a number of persons participated in
|
||
debates against Secularists. The list of clergymen included the
|
||
Rev. J. Henson, the Rev. Alexander Stewart, the Rev. J.A. McCann,
|
||
the Rev. A. Hatchard, the Rev. G.F. Handel Rowe, the Rev. A.J.
|
||
Harrison, the Rev. Brewin Grant, the Rev. R. Shepherd, the Rev.
|
||
W. Howard, the Rev. T.D. Matthias, the Rev. William Adamson, the
|
||
Rev. J.C. Whitemore, the Rev. R.A. Armstrong, Father Ignatius,
|
||
the Rev. J.H. Gordon, the Rev. W.M. Westerby, the Rev. Marshden
|
||
Gibson, the Rev. B.H. Chapman, and others. Lay debaters were
|
||
approximately as numerous as the debating clergymen, and
|
||
included, besides others, W.T. Lee, S. Worley, Alexander
|
||
Robertson, Thomas Barber, W. Gillespie, David King (Editor of the
|
||
British Harbinger), T. Mahoney, William Rossiter (Principal of
|
||
the Camberwell Free Fine Arts Gallery), Walter R. Browne, H.D.
|
||
Jeffries, Robert Roberts (Editor of the Christadelphian), William
|
||
Simpson, Thomas Crow, H.A. Long, B. Harris Cooper, and G. Sexton.
|
||
For the Secularists, Bradlaugh, Charles Watts, Mrs. Harriet Law,
|
||
Annie Besant, Foote, Aveling, J. Symes, R. Rossetti, Sam
|
||
Standring, C.J. Hunt, and others participated. Secularist debates
|
||
were often lively affairs and were frequently attended by large
|
||
crowds. Bradlaugh, for example, reported that at one of his
|
||
debates with the Rev. A.J. Harrison there was present "an
|
||
audience of 5,000." Naturally the interest was at times intense.
|
||
In reporting a debate at Grimsby between Mrs. Harriet Law and the
|
||
Rev. R. Shepherd the Grimsby Advertiser declared, "Our readers at
|
||
a distance can scarcely form an idea of the deep interest
|
||
attached to the controversy by all parties in Grimsby, nor the
|
||
excitement which has manifested itself during the delivery of the
|
||
lectures." Many of the debates lasted for several nights. [The
|
||
remarks of the "Grimsby Advertiser" were quoted in "The
|
||
Secularist controversy," "National Reformer," May 26, 1867. The
|
||
debates were reported in the pages of Secularist periodicals such
|
||
as the "National Reformer," the "Freethinker," and the "Secular
|
||
Review and Secularist." Debates too numerous for citation were
|
||
published in pamphlet form. References to debates appear in such
|
||
biographies as Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner's "Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1894).]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
53
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
The outdoor assemblages arranged by the Secularists took
|
||
place in open spaces of numerous municipal centers -- London,
|
||
Portsmouth, Bristol, Leeds, Derby, Newcastle-on-Tyne, Hull,
|
||
Plymouth, Edinburgh, Rochdale, Nottingham, Sunderland, Hastings,
|
||
Northampton, and various others. The number of stations at which
|
||
outdoor meetings were held was an impressive one. In 1885
|
||
(perhaps one of the most active years) there were in London alone
|
||
stations at Albert Embankment, Battersea Park, Clerkenwell Green,
|
||
Columbia Road, Elgin Road, Green Lanes, Hyde Park, Kensal Green,
|
||
Kingsland Green, Midland Railway Arches, Mile End Waste, Peckham
|
||
Rye, Plaistow Green, Regent's Park, Streatham Common, Victoria
|
||
Park, Walham Green, and possibly other places; and the list of
|
||
provincial stations reported the same year was a comparable one.
|
||
The Secularist outdoor meetings were ordinarily held by local
|
||
Secular societies, each participating society being in charge of
|
||
a station in it's vicinity. As the purpose of the meetings was
|
||
primarily to win converts to the Secular Movement, practically
|
||
all of the lecturers simply extolled the philosophy of Secularism
|
||
and attacked the Bible and Christianity: few discussed the
|
||
detailed political and social program sponsored by the
|
||
Secularists. The meetings were held during the spring, summer,
|
||
and autumn months. They were conducted usually by young men.
|
||
Persons in the audiences were encouraged to make comments on the
|
||
lectures, and often lively discussions took place between the
|
||
speakers and their critics. The Secularists were convinced that
|
||
many persons attended the Secularist outdoor exercises who never
|
||
could have been persuaded to enter the Secular halls. ["National
|
||
Reformer," 1866-1890, passim; "Freethinker," 1881-1890, passim;
|
||
"National Secular Society's Almanac for 1881" (1880), p. 48.]
|
||
|
||
CEREMONIES
|
||
|
||
Departing from the policy of the early secularists,
|
||
Bradlaugh and his associates made use of ceremonies. These were
|
||
utilized upon the occasion of the naming of an infant of
|
||
Secularist parents and in connection of the burial of
|
||
Secularists, and were thus Secular counterparts to the
|
||
christenings and funeral rites associated with Christianity,
|
||
[See "Reports of Meetings" and "Obituaries" in the "National
|
||
Reformer" throughout the period, and "Obituary" and
|
||
"Correspondents" in the "Freethinker", for the years 1881 to
|
||
1890.]
|
||
|
||
The Secular ceremonies were undertaken not only as a source
|
||
of emotional satisfaction to Secularism, but also as a means of
|
||
inspiring the social (and domestic) affections, it was thought,
|
||
too, that the use of the ceremonies would strengthen the Secular
|
||
Movement itself, by enriching its emotional appeal. [Austin
|
||
Holyoake, "Secular Ceremonies," "National Reformer," Jan. 12,
|
||
1968.]
|
||
|
||
The forms used in connection with the Secular ceremonies
|
||
were prepared by Secularist leaders. Austin Holyoake and Charles
|
||
Watts, in 1868, published the ones which were generally used,
|
||
Watts bringing out the form for the naming of infants, and Austin
|
||
Holyoake issuing the burial form. A form for each of the
|
||
ceremonies was also brought out, however, by Annie Besant -- in
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
54
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
1883. [Holyoake, "Secular Ceremonies," "National Reformer,"
|
||
November 15, 1868; Charles Watts, "Secular Ceremonies," "National
|
||
Reformer," December 20, 1969; R.C. Forder, "Monthly Meeting of
|
||
the Executive of the National Secular society," "National
|
||
Reformer," September 2, 1883.]
|
||
|
||
The Secular ceremony for the naming of infants took place in
|
||
connection with the regular Sunday meetings. A Secularist
|
||
lecturer named the child and identified it with the Secular body.
|
||
At the same time, the officiant expressed thoughts and
|
||
aspirations appropriate to the occasion. He declared that by
|
||
publicly introducing their infant into the Secularist ranks, the
|
||
parents were giving a pledge that they desired to dedicate their
|
||
offspring to the cause of free inquiry and unsectarian progress;
|
||
and he expressed the wish that the child would at maturity
|
||
realize the parents' fondest hopes in these respects. On the
|
||
other hand, he reminded the parents that such a realization would
|
||
likely be forthcoming only if they guarded well the formation of
|
||
the child's character; and to this end he urged them to encircle
|
||
the child with pure influences and to foster within it the desire
|
||
for excellence and virtue. In his concluding remarks the
|
||
officiating lecturer expressed the hope that, in its last hours
|
||
of life, the infant named in the ceremony would obtain
|
||
consolation from a consciousness that to the best of its
|
||
knowledge and capacity it had been true to the Secularist
|
||
conception of the mission of life.
|
||
|
||
At the Secular burial service, the Secularist who officiated
|
||
endeavored to afford consolation and reconcilement to the
|
||
bereaved. He recalled the loyal devotion of the deceased to the
|
||
Secular ideal of the service of humanity, and declared that such
|
||
devotion had not only rendered tranquil the deceased's life and
|
||
death, but that the remembrance of it constituted a legacy to
|
||
surviving relatives and friends. He then dwelt for a time on
|
||
personal matters relating to the deceased. Next, be discussed the
|
||
inevitability of death, but declared that it had no terrors for
|
||
persons who had the consciousness of a well spent life. Finally,
|
||
he exhorted his hearers to emulate the good deeds of the
|
||
deceased, and suggested that if they did so they would enjoy the
|
||
conviction that their own memory would be cherished by those who
|
||
came after them. [The foregoing descriptions are based upon the
|
||
forms produced by Austin Holyoake and Charles Watts.]
|
||
|
||
FURTHERING THE PRINCIPLES OF SECULARISM
|
||
|
||
A major activity of the Secularists in the period from 1866
|
||
to 1890 was obviously efforts to promote the diffusion of
|
||
Secularist doctrines. In this connection secularist agitators
|
||
devoted considerable attention to furthering the spread of the
|
||
fundamental principles of Secularism. Through countless platform
|
||
utterances, as well as by pamphlets and by articles in Secular
|
||
periodicals, they endeavored to argue convincingly that a man's
|
||
highest duty is the promotion of human welfare upon earth and
|
||
that such an end can be achieved only by means of human effort
|
||
exerted in the light of Secular knowledge. [G.W. Foote,
|
||
"Secularism, the Philosophy of Life" (1879); Annie Besant, "The
|
||
True Basis of Morality" (1874); Charles Watts, "Secular Morality;
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
55
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
What Is It? An Explanation and a Defense" (1880); G.W. Foote,
|
||
"The Philosophy of Secularism" (1879); Arthur B. Moss, "The
|
||
Secular Faith" (1886); "National Reformer," 1866-1890, passim;
|
||
"Freethinker'," 1881-1890, passim; "Secular Review and
|
||
Secularist," passim.]
|
||
|
||
The less-basic features of the Secularist program were not,
|
||
however, neglected. The Secularists labored as energetically to
|
||
achieve the special reforms which they envisaged for various
|
||
departments of society as they worked to secure the adoption of
|
||
their broader principles. Indeed, in this connection they did not
|
||
entirely restrict themselves to matters specifically mentioned in
|
||
their printed statement of aims. In one or two directions they
|
||
endeavored to effect additional changes. It will be illuminating
|
||
to look at the entire range of their activity.
|
||
|
||
One striking part of it was their agitation for the
|
||
abandonment of the monarchy and the establishment of a republic.
|
||
[There were Secularist who were not Republicans. Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "To the Archbishop of York," "National Reformer,"
|
||
October 16, 1881.] Though their greatest activity in this
|
||
direction occurred in the early 1870's, following the
|
||
establishment of the Third Republic in France, they labored at
|
||
the task throughout the entire period under discussion -- even in
|
||
the later years of the era, despite the fact that by that time
|
||
the monarchy was steadily growing in popularity, thanks to the
|
||
resumption by Queen Victoria of the ceremonial functions which
|
||
she had neglected in the years following Prince Albert's death.
|
||
|
||
The efforts of the Secularists in favor of Republicanism
|
||
took the form, in part, of lectures. Bradlaugh, Charles Watts,
|
||
Mrs. Law, Holyoake, Annie Besant, Foote, and numerous other
|
||
Secularist speakers condemned the monarchy again and again,
|
||
charging that it was too costly for the toiling masses to
|
||
maintain, declaring that it fostered upper-class exploitation of
|
||
the people at large, and avowing that it was synonymous with
|
||
political incompetence. ["Reports of Meetings" "National
|
||
Reformer," 1866-1890, passim; "Special Notice," "Freethinker,"
|
||
1881-1890, passim; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1894), I, 306.]
|
||
|
||
Various Secularists also wrote on the subject. The work
|
||
which was the most conspicuous was undoubtedly Bradlaugh's
|
||
Impeachment of the House of Brunswick, which, originally
|
||
published in 1872, reached by 1881 its eighth edition. Calling
|
||
for the exclusion of the reigning dynasty from the throne by
|
||
Parliament, upon the death or abdication of Queen Victoria, the
|
||
booklet justified its demand on the following grounds:
|
||
|
||
"1st. That during the 157 years through which the
|
||
Brunswick family have reigned over the British Empire, the
|
||
policy and conduct of the majority of the members of that
|
||
family, and especially of the various reigning members,
|
||
always saving and excepting her present Majesty, have been
|
||
hostile to the welfare of the mass of the people.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
56
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"2nd. That during the same period of 157 years fifteen-
|
||
sixteenths of the entire National Debt have been created,
|
||
and that the balance due of this debt is in great part the
|
||
result of wars arising from the mischievous and pro-
|
||
Hanoverian policy of the Brunswick family.
|
||
|
||
3rd. That in consequence of the incompetency or want of
|
||
desire for governmental duty on the part of the various
|
||
reigning members of the House of Brunswick, the governing
|
||
power of the country has been practically limited to a few
|
||
families, who have used government in the majority of
|
||
instances as a system of machinery for securing place and
|
||
pension for themselves and their associates; while it is
|
||
submitted that government should be the best contrivance of
|
||
national wisdom for the alleviation of national suffering
|
||
and promotion of national happiness.
|
||
|
||
"4th. That a large pension list has been created, the
|
||
recipients of the largest pensions being in most cases
|
||
persons who are already members of wealthy families, and who
|
||
have done nothing whatever to justify their being kept in
|
||
idleness at the national expense, while so many workers in
|
||
the agricultural districts are in a state of semi-
|
||
starvation; so many toilers in large works in Wales,
|
||
Scotland, and some parts of England, are in constant debt
|
||
and dependence; and while large numbers of the Irish
|
||
peasantry -- for ... generations ... denied life at home --
|
||
have until lately been driven to seek those means of
|
||
existence across the sea which their own fertile land should
|
||
have amply provided for them.
|
||
|
||
"5th. That the monarchs of the Brunswick family have
|
||
been, except in a few cases of vicious interference, costly
|
||
puppets, useful only to the governing aristocracy as a cloak
|
||
to shield the real wrong doers from the just reproaches of
|
||
the people.
|
||
|
||
"6th. That the Brunswick family have shown themselves
|
||
utterly incapable of initiating wise legislation....
|
||
|
||
"7th. That under the Brunswick family the national
|
||
expenditure has increased to a frightful extent, while our
|
||
best possessions in America have been lost, and our home
|
||
possession, Ireland, rendered chronic in its discontent by
|
||
the terrible misgovernment under the four Georges.
|
||
|
||
"8th. That the ever increasing burden of the national
|
||
taxation has been shifted from the land onto the shoulders
|
||
of the middle and lower classes, the landed aristocracy
|
||
having, until lately, enjoyed the practical monopoly of tax-
|
||
levying power. ..."
|
||
|
||
And by way of giving greater force to his arguments, Bradlaugh
|
||
concluded the treatise with these challenging words: "I loathe
|
||
these small German breast-bestarred wanderers, whose only merit
|
||
is their loving hatred of one another. In their own land they
|
||
vegetate and wither unnoticed; here we pay them high to marry and
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
57
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
perpetuate a pauper prince race. If they do nothing they are
|
||
'good.' If they do ill, loyalty gilds the vice till it looks like
|
||
virtue." [Charles Bradlaugh, "Impeachment of the House of
|
||
Brunswick."]
|
||
|
||
Other Secularist writers, if not so exhaustive in their
|
||
arguments, were equally bold. Austin Holyoake, in a pamphlet
|
||
entitled 'Would a Republican Form of Government Be Suitable in
|
||
England?' (1873), declared, on grounds both of efficiency and
|
||
economy, that it would not- J.M. Robertson published pamphlet
|
||
entitled 'Why Preserve the Monarchy?' (1887), in which he argued
|
||
against its preservation on the ground that it was simply "a
|
||
great machine for manufacturing snobs and sycophants." Annie
|
||
Besant wrote an article in the National Reformer of January 16,
|
||
1887, proposing, in view of the growing expenditures of the
|
||
government, that the forthcoming Queen's Jubilee be celebrated by
|
||
abolishing the monarchy, Foote brought out three editions of a
|
||
pamphlet entitled Royal Paupers, showing what royalty does for
|
||
the people. And Charles Watts argued for Republicanism in a
|
||
number of pamphlets. [J.M. Robertson, "Why Preserve the
|
||
Monarchy?" (1887); Annie Besant, "Why We should Celebrate the
|
||
Queen's Jubilee," "National Reformer," January 16, 1887; J.M.
|
||
Robertson, "Royalism: a Note on the Queen's Jubilee" (1886); G.W.
|
||
Foote, "Royal Paupers; Showing What Royalty Does for the People"
|
||
(3rd edition, 1888); Annie Besant, "English Republicanism"
|
||
(1878); and George Standring, "Does Royalty Pay?" (1884).]
|
||
|
||
Besides all this, the Secularists became actively interested
|
||
in the working-class section of the strong Republican movement
|
||
which manifested itself throughout the country after the Franco-
|
||
Prussian War. As the Republican workers followed the device of
|
||
forming Republican clubs, several Secular societies constituted
|
||
themselves Republican clubs for purposes of the agitation, and
|
||
Bradlaugh became the President of the London Republican Club.
|
||
Indeed, the Republican club of which Bradlaugh was President took
|
||
the initiative in the calling of a conference at Manchester of
|
||
delegates of Republican clubs '(May, 1873); and at the Manchester
|
||
Conference Bradlaugh, Foote, and other Secularists aided in the
|
||
formation of a short-lived National Republican League. [A.S.
|
||
Headingley, "Biography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880), p. 135;
|
||
"London Republican Club. The Inaugural Address of the President,
|
||
Mr. Charles Bradlaugh," May 12, 1871; "National Reformer,"
|
||
January 5, 1873, to September 7, 1873, passim.
|
||
|
||
In the later stages of the Franco-Prussian War, Bradlaugh
|
||
endeavored to aid the newly-established Third French Republic. In
|
||
connection with Dr. Richard Congreve, Professor E.S. Beesley, and
|
||
other Positivists, he organized a series of public meetings
|
||
looking to the termination of hostilities between France and
|
||
Prussia on terms as favorable to France as possible. "National
|
||
Reformer," September 18, 1870, to January 15, 1871, passim.
|
||
Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I,
|
||
312-321.]
|
||
|
||
Closely associated with the Secular Republican agitation was
|
||
the effort of the Secularists to secure the abolition of the
|
||
House of Lords. In this work resolutions were passed, petitions
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
58
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
were presented to Parliament, and many speeches were delivered.
|
||
Articles and pamphlets were written, too, for the cause,
|
||
sometimes in a spirit of fiery determination. Witness the words
|
||
of Mrs. Besant:
|
||
|
||
"A House in the election of whose members the people
|
||
have no voice; a House whose members are born into it,
|
||
instead of winning their way into it by service to the
|
||
state; a House which is built upon cradles and not upon
|
||
merit; a House whose deliberations may be shared in by fools
|
||
or by knaves, provided only that the brow be coronetted --
|
||
such a House is a disgrace to a free country, and an outrage
|
||
on popular liberty. ... The house of Lords must ... [go].
|
||
|
||
But these things were only a part of what the Secularists did.
|
||
When the People's League for the Abolition of the Hereditary
|
||
Legislative Chamber was formed, in 1884, the Executive of the
|
||
National Secular Society affiliated with the association, while
|
||
Foote and R.O. Smith, one of the Vice-Presidents of the National
|
||
Secular Society, served on its Administrative Committee.
|
||
[Bradlaugh urged that the place of the House of Lords be taken by
|
||
a second chamber composed of life members. Bradlaugh's position
|
||
was endorsed by the Executive of the National Secular Society in
|
||
1874. The bulk of the Secularist lecturers calling for the
|
||
abolition of the House of Lords envisaged a single-chamber
|
||
government.
|
||
|
||
"National Reformer," 1866-1890, passim; "Freethinker," 1881-
|
||
1890, passim; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1894), I, 264-266 and 393.]
|
||
|
||
The agitation of the Secularists for the removal of
|
||
hereditary elements from the government was paralleled by
|
||
determined efforts which they made to bring about universal (male
|
||
and female) suffrage. Some of their most fervent work in this
|
||
direction was done at the very beginning of the period of
|
||
Secularist history now under consideration, when the working
|
||
classes were agitating for the reform of Parliament, preceding
|
||
the Reform Act of 1867. At this time the Secularists aided the
|
||
National Reform League -- as, indeed, they had already begun to
|
||
do before the close of the previous Secularist era -- because the
|
||
League, though calling only for manhood suffrage and not sharing
|
||
the Secularist aim of votes also for women, was traveling a great
|
||
distance toward the Secularist goal. Bradlaugh not only served
|
||
the League faithfully as one of its Vice-Presidents, but wrote in
|
||
the National Reformer and elsewhere in the interest of its cause
|
||
and delivered many addresses on its behalf. Holyoake, also,
|
||
lectured for the League and served it as Vice-President, Then,
|
||
too, Mrs, Harriet Law spoke under the auspices of the League. And
|
||
many Secularists of the rank and file assisted the League by
|
||
attending mass meetings which it arranged in London and other
|
||
cities. ["National Reformer," September 17, 1865, to June 9,
|
||
1867, passim; G.J. Holyoake, "Working Class Representation: Its
|
||
Conditions and Consequences" (1868), p. 3: Joseph McCabe, "Life
|
||
and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 11, 17, 23,
|
||
25-29, 34, and 35-36; Charles Bradlaugh, "Autobiography of Mr.
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh" (1873), p. 18; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
59
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"Charles Bradlaugh" (1894) I, 220-237; J.M. Robertson, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1920), p. 39; G.J. Holyoake, "Sixty Year's of an
|
||
Agitator's Life" (1892), II, 86-90; A.S. Headingley, "Biography
|
||
of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880). pp. 96-99.]
|
||
|
||
In the period between the passage of the Reform Act of 1867
|
||
with its extension of the suffrage to the mass of city workmen
|
||
and the Reform Act of 1884, the agitation of the Secularists in
|
||
the direction of votes for all men and women was not extensive.
|
||
Nevertheless there were efforts. Bradlaugh and Mrs. Besant
|
||
lectured for the cause and one or two appeals were made in the
|
||
National Reformer. [Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 393; Annie Besant, "Civil and Religious
|
||
Liberty" (1882), p. 19; Centenary Committee, "Champion of
|
||
Liberty: Charles Bradlaugh" (1933), 167-169; Annie Besant, "The
|
||
Political Status of Women" (1885); "National Reformer," January
|
||
2, 1870, to April 2, 1982.]
|
||
|
||
After the Reform Act of 1884 had granted voting privileges
|
||
to the vast majority of rural workmen, the Secularists leave some
|
||
aid to the cause of votes for women. In 1885, J.M. Robertson,
|
||
writing in the National Reformer, supported it. In 1885, too,
|
||
Annie Besant argued for it in a pamphlet entitled The Political
|
||
Status of Women. And in 1886 Bradlaugh, then a member of
|
||
Parliament, supported a bill (which failed to pass) calling for
|
||
the bestowal upon women of the right of voting for Parliamentary
|
||
candidates. [Though voting for the woman suffrage bill of 1886,
|
||
Bradlaugh objected to its provision for withholding the suffrage
|
||
from married women, and gave notice of his intention to move in
|
||
the committee on the bill that the restriction be removed. He
|
||
never had the opportunity to do so, as the bill was blocked
|
||
before it reached the committee stage.
|
||
|
||
Annie Besant, "The Political Status of Women" (1885);
|
||
"National Reformer." December 13, 1885, to December 26, 1886,
|
||
passim.
|
||
|
||
In connection with the whole subject of the democratic
|
||
agitation of the Secularists, it is worth noting that Bradlaugh,
|
||
seconded by Annie Besant, opposed imperialistic aggression and
|
||
advocated home rule for Ireland, and that Mrs. Besant aided the
|
||
cause of women's rights in general. See, for example, "National
|
||
Reformer," 1866-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Along with the foregoing activities, the Secularists of the
|
||
Bradlaugh period undertook to achieve various aims looking to a
|
||
more comfortable and pleasant life for the great masses of the
|
||
people. One of the things they did was to agitate for the opening
|
||
of libraries, museums, and art galleries on Sunday. In this
|
||
connection their efforts included, first of all, writing and
|
||
speaking as Secularists. Foote, for example, in 'Arrows of
|
||
Freethought' (1882), declared:
|
||
|
||
"The Christians ... like going to the Church and public
|
||
house on Sunday, and those establishments are permitted to
|
||
open; they have no wish to go elsewhere, and so they keep
|
||
all other establishments closed. This is mere impudence. Let
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
60
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
them go where they choose and allow the same freedom to
|
||
other people. Those who advocate a free Sunday ask for no
|
||
favor; they demand justice. They do not propose to compel
|
||
any Christian to enter a museum, a library, or an art
|
||
gallery; they simply claim the right to go in themselves.
|
||
The denial of that right is a denial of liberty, which every
|
||
free man is bound to resent....
|
||
|
||
"Our toiling masses ... have one day of leisure in the
|
||
week. ... Yet the Christian legislature tries its utmost to
|
||
spoil the boon. ... Drunkenness is our national vice. ...
|
||
Give Englishmen a chance, furnish them with counter
|
||
attractions, and they will abjure intoxication like their
|
||
Continental neighbors. ..."
|
||
|
||
In addition to working under their own party name, the
|
||
Secularists aided the National Sunday League. Mrs. Besant served
|
||
it as one of its Vice-Presidents, and both Holyoake and Bradlaugh
|
||
gave it platform assistance in connection with its great public
|
||
demonstrations. The labors of the Secularists (and the Sunday
|
||
League) were not in vain. By the end of the era of Secularist
|
||
history under consideration numbers of art galleries, libraries,
|
||
and museums in London and elsewhere were opened to Sunday
|
||
visitors. ["Sugar Plums," "Freethinker," 1881-1890, passim; G.W.
|
||
Foote, "Sunday Tyranny," "Arrows of Freethought" (1882); Joseph
|
||
McCabe. "George Jacob Holyoake" (1922), pp. 36-37 and 67; Annie
|
||
Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), p. 249; "National Reformer,"
|
||
1866-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Social entertainments were also provided by the Secularists.
|
||
On various occasions Secularists and their guests participated in
|
||
conversation, singing, and dancing, and tea. During the summer
|
||
season excursions and picnics were arranged. At attractive
|
||
retreats in the country children and grown-ups rambled and played
|
||
games, or enjoyed speeches, recitations, and songs. ["National
|
||
Reformer," 1866-1890, passim; "Sugar Plums," "Freethinker,"
|
||
1881-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Then, too, by drawing upon an "Endowment Fund" which they
|
||
maintained, and which was replenished by popular subscription,
|
||
and by entertainments and lectures to which an admission fee was
|
||
charged, the Secularists rendered modest financial assistance, as
|
||
opportunity permitted, to those among their numbers who were sick
|
||
or in distress. ["National Reformer," 1866-1890, passim; A.S.
|
||
Headingley, "Biography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880), p. 119.]
|
||
|
||
A basic phase of the Secularist activity in the field of
|
||
social betterment was concerned with conditions in the rural
|
||
districts. The evil state of affairs confronting the common
|
||
people in the country roused the Secularists to action.
|
||
Embracing, as their mature program, the proposals gradually
|
||
worked out by Bradlaugh, they demanded: (1) abolition of the laws
|
||
of primogeniture and entail; (2) reduction of the legal expenses
|
||
attendant upon the sale of land; (3) abolition of the Game Laws;
|
||
(4) compulsory cultivation of land (on the strength of the
|
||
principle enunciated by John Stuart Mill and others that private
|
||
ownership of land carried with it the public, obligation of its
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
61
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
improvement); (5) "Security to the tenant cultivator for
|
||
improvements"; (6) "Revaluation of lands for the more equitable
|
||
imposition of the land tax"; (7) a graduated land tax. [This
|
||
program was set forth in its entirety in 1880, One after another
|
||
of its proposals had, however, already been called for by
|
||
Bradlaugh and other Secularists.] In support of these measures,
|
||
in whole or in part, Secularist leaders not only wrote a number
|
||
of articles and pamphlets, and delivered numerous addresses, but
|
||
took other forms of action as well. Bradlaugh, for example, in
|
||
1869, wrote a public letter to Gladstone, who was then Prime
|
||
Minister, asking especially for compulsory land cultivation and
|
||
Game Laws abolition. Bradlaugh also, in 1880, formed a Land Law
|
||
Reform League which carried on an agitation in support of the
|
||
Secularist program. Annie Besant and Dr. Aveling served as Vice-
|
||
Presidents of the Reform League, and Bradlaugh himself became its
|
||
President. As a member of Parliament, though without success,
|
||
made strenuous efforts, each year from 1886 to 1890, inclusive,
|
||
to secure the support of Parliament to the principle of the
|
||
compulsory cultivation of the land. [Charles Bradlaugh, "The
|
||
Land Question" (18??); Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh," Pt. One, pp. 264 and 393 and Pt. Two (by J.M.
|
||
Robertson), pp. 179-184 and 368-369; Annie Besant, "Annie Besant"
|
||
(1893), pp 251-252; Annie Besant, "Civil and Religious Liberty"
|
||
(187?),.pp. 12-18; C.C. Cattell. "The land: How to Make It Feed
|
||
the People and Pay the Taxes" (1879); Charles Bradlaugh, "1880:
|
||
Its Work and Promise," "National Secular Society's Almanac,"
|
||
1881, p. 15; "Freethinker," passim; "National Reformer,"
|
||
1866-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
The Secularists of the Bradlaugh era undertook to strike at
|
||
the poverty of the rural and urban masses alike by means of
|
||
efforts looking to smaller working-class families; and, as the
|
||
best means of preventing large families, they exerted themselves
|
||
in the interest of birth control. To this end they not only
|
||
carried on an agitation in favor of birth control, but sold
|
||
literature containing instructions as to the proper methods of
|
||
effecting its accomplishment. In the first decade of the period
|
||
their activity in this sphere was not extensive. They did,
|
||
however, deliver addresses from time to time in advocacy of birth
|
||
control, and they circulated a few pamphlets of propaganda and
|
||
instruction, such as The Fruits of Philosophy (1832), by the
|
||
American physician, Dr. Charles Knowlton. [G.J. Holyoake and
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh, "Secularism, Science, and Atheism' (1870), pp.
|
||
31-32; Annie Besant, "The Law of Population" (1878); Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), 11, 16-17;
|
||
"National Reformer," April 26, 1869, to December 3, 1876,
|
||
passim.]
|
||
|
||
The year 1877 saw a remarkable intensification of Secularist
|
||
birth-control activity. This grew out of circumstances connected
|
||
with the Knowlton pamphlet. On January 8, 1877, Charles Watts was
|
||
arrested for publishing 'The Fruits of Philosophy,' on the ground
|
||
that the work was obscene. When the trial came on, Watts pleaded
|
||
guilty, and was released under suspended judgment. Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, Annie Besant and others, believing not only that
|
||
birth-control literature for the masses was imperiled, but
|
||
feeling that the situation involved the whole matter of a free
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
62
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
press, strongly condemned Watts for not fighting the charge that
|
||
had been made against him, Bradlaugh going so far as to deprive
|
||
him of his sub-editorship of the 'National Reformer' and to cease
|
||
patronizing his printing and publishing concern: and Bradlaugh
|
||
and Mrs. Besant, after now establishing a firm of their own --
|
||
the Freethought Publishing Company -- proceeded to publish the
|
||
treatise themselves, notifying the authorities, at the same time,
|
||
of their action. But the publication of the Knowlton pamphlet was
|
||
only a part of the expanded birth-control agitation. Both
|
||
Bradlaugh and Mrs. Besant were prosecuted and were condemned to
|
||
six months' imprisonment, though the sentence was subsequently
|
||
quashed on a legal technicality; and in the course of the trial
|
||
Mrs. Besant eloquently stated the case for birth control. At the
|
||
same time, by extensively publicizing their trial, the two
|
||
defendants at once called attention to the birth control
|
||
propaganda and promoted the sale of the pamphlet which they had
|
||
published. Furthermore, Bradlaugh founded a new Malthusian League
|
||
(the one which he established in 1861 had died some 10 years
|
||
previously) which spread the gospel of birth control for half a
|
||
century; and Mrs. Besant issued a pamphlet of her own, under the
|
||
title 'The Law of Population,' advocating birth control and
|
||
giving advice as to harmless ways of achieving it. [Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh and Annie Besant, Editors, "In the High Court of
|
||
Justice: Queen's Bench Division, June 18, 1877. The Queen v.
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh and Annie Besant. A verbatim report of the
|
||
proceedings of the trial of Bradlaugh and Besant for publishing
|
||
the Knowlton Pamphlet" (Third edition, 1878); Hypatia Bradlaugh
|
||
Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), II, 20-29; Annie Besant,
|
||
"Annie Besant" (1893), pp. 205-213 and 220; Norman E. Himes,
|
||
"Medical History of Contraception" (1936), pp. 239-240 and
|
||
245-251; Annie Besant, "The Law of Population" (author's American
|
||
edition, 1878); "National Reformer," January 14, 1877, to May 5,
|
||
1878, passim.]
|
||
|
||
In the later years of the Bradlaugh period the activity of
|
||
the Secularists in the interest of birth control, though less
|
||
extensive than that of 1877, was considerable. One part of it
|
||
took place in connection with the case of the highly-respected
|
||
Secularist bookseller, Edward Truelove. In 1878 Truelove was
|
||
tried, sentenced, and compelled to undergo four months'
|
||
imprisonment and pay a fine of 50 pounds for selling two birth-
|
||
control pamphlets -- Robert Dale Owen's 'Moral Physiology' and
|
||
J.H. Palmer's 'Individual, Family' and National Poverty.' As they
|
||
had recently done in connection with the Bradlaugh-Besant
|
||
prosecution, the Secularists utilized the Truelove case to
|
||
advance the propaganda of birth control by giving the affair
|
||
extensive publicity in the Secularist press. The other part of
|
||
the Secularist activity was less sensational, but it extended
|
||
over a longer period of time and was perhaps in the end no less
|
||
effective. Secularist booksellers continued to circulate 'The Law
|
||
of Population' and other works of advice and instruction.
|
||
Secularist lecturers also made, frequent appeals throughout the
|
||
country. And J.M. Robertson wrote articles of advocacy in the
|
||
'National Reformer.' [Norman E. Himes, "Medical History of
|
||
Contraception" (1936), pp. 240-243; J.M. Robertson, "Socialism
|
||
and Malthusianism" (1885); Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893),
|
||
pp. 228-231; A.S. Headingley, "Biography of Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1880), Preface in; "National Reformer," 1878-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
63
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
The Secularist birth-control activity was of significance,
|
||
in at least two respects: it influenced the internal affairs of
|
||
the Secularist Movement, and it made itself felt in the life of
|
||
the nation as a whole. Each of these forms of influence demands,
|
||
in turn, a word of explanation.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, as will be recalled, in his displeasure at
|
||
Charles Watts for refusing to defend himself in court as the
|
||
publisher of Dr. Knowlton's pamphlet, not only removed Watts from
|
||
the sub-editorship of the National Reformer, but ceased to do
|
||
business with Watts' printing and publishing concern. Both men
|
||
appealed to the Secular party for moral support, and when, at the
|
||
Annual Conference of the National Secular Society, held a few
|
||
months afterwards, Bradlaugh was reelected as President, Watts
|
||
declined to accept a nomination for a Vice-Presidency and, a few
|
||
days later, resigned from the National Secular Society.
|
||
|
||
Alongside of this, differences developed in another quarter.
|
||
Holyoake felt himself to have been aggrieved because Annie Besant
|
||
had asserted, in the Bradlaugh-Besant trial, that Holyoake had
|
||
sold the treatise by Knowlton on his own account, instead of
|
||
declaring that he had sold it as the "agent" of another
|
||
publisher; and he became still more displeased because Bradlaugh,
|
||
in a public statement, seemed to him to imply that the National
|
||
Secular Society endorsed the Knowlton pamphlet. As a result,
|
||
Holyoake resigned the office of Vice-President of the National
|
||
Secular Society and, like Watts, withdrew from the association.
|
||
|
||
Though Holyoake and Watts were both in sympathy with birth
|
||
control, they came to disapprove of Dr. Knowlton's particular
|
||
treatment of the subject. Other Secularists shared this attitude.
|
||
Still others of the Secular body either were opposed outright to
|
||
birth control or felt that its championship by the Secularists
|
||
was inexpedient.
|
||
|
||
Under the circumstances, Watts and Holyoake led some of the
|
||
dissatisfied Secularists out of the National Secular Society, and
|
||
with them founded the British Secular Union, the origin and brief
|
||
history of which have been alluded to in an earlier connection.
|
||
[William Stewart Ross, "Sketch of the Life and Character of C.
|
||
Watts" (188?), pp. 5-6: G.J. Holyoake, "The Warpath of Opinion"
|
||
(189?), pp. 27-35; "High Court of Justice, June 19," "Times,"
|
||
June 20, 1877; G.M. Williams, "The Passionate Pilgrim" (1931) pp.
|
||
77-93; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake"
|
||
(1908), II, 77 and 79-85; A.S. Headingley, "Biography of Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 163-165; "National Reformer," January 28
|
||
to August 5, 1877, passim; "Secular Review and Secularist," June
|
||
30 to July 28, 1877, passim.]
|
||
|
||
The influence of the Secularist birth-control agitation upon
|
||
the country at large was significant. In the first place, despite
|
||
the harsh -- and evil foul -- criticism which the campaign
|
||
evoked, it evidently promoted the practice of birth control on a
|
||
more extensive scale than had been the case hitherto. This is
|
||
indicated, for one thing, by the wide diffusion of the Secularist
|
||
propaganda. Approximately 100,000 copies of the Bradlaugh-Besant
|
||
edition of the Knowlton pamphlet were sold within the three
|
||
months following its publication, to say nothing of scores of
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
64
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
thousands of copies of the editions of earlier publishers. Then,
|
||
too, some 150,000 copies of Annie Besant's 'Law of Population'
|
||
were sold. And an undetermined number of persons read other
|
||
literature written or distributed by the Secularists, or heard
|
||
Secularist lectures, or came under the influence of the
|
||
Malthusian League. The Secularist promotion of birth control is
|
||
further indicated by the late-modern decline of the English birth
|
||
rate, which had its beginning at the very time the Secularist
|
||
propaganda achieved its greatest prominence -- in 1877, the year
|
||
of the prosecution of Bradlaugh and Mrs. Besant. ["National
|
||
Reformer," April 15, 1877, to July 26, 1891, passim; Norman E.
|
||
Himes, "Medical History of Contraception" (1936), 243-245 and
|
||
259; Annie Besant, "The Law of Population" (1877); Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh and Annie Besant, Editor,9, "In the High Court of
|
||
Justice; Queen's Bench Division, June 18, 1877. The Queen v.
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh and Annie Besant"; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner,
|
||
"Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), Pt. 'Two (by J. M. Robertson), pp-
|
||
175-177; Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), pp. 224 and 229.]
|
||
|
||
Besides increasing the practice of contraception, the
|
||
Secularist birth-control agitation (and from the point of view of
|
||
the Secularists this was the important matter) alleviated to a
|
||
degree some of the evils endured by the working classes. As we
|
||
have seen, the low wages and the periodic unemployment of the
|
||
British masses in the middle of the 19th century were associated
|
||
with the excessively large number of laborers available to the
|
||
employing classes. In so far, then, as the Secularists by their
|
||
promotion of birth control lessened this overpopulation, to that
|
||
extent they reduced the poverty and insecurity of the workers.
|
||
[The efforts of Holyoake to improve the lot of the working
|
||
classes by rendering assistance to the Cooperative Movement have
|
||
been alluded to in another connection.]
|
||
|
||
The Secularists of the Bradlaugh era likewise endeavored to
|
||
secure the promotion of Secular education. This part of their
|
||
activity involved at once the operation of Secular schools of
|
||
their own and efforts looking to the furtherance of Secular
|
||
education in other schools of the country
|
||
|
||
Secularist schools, operated in connection with local
|
||
Secular societies, were to be found in such large industrial
|
||
centers as London, Manchester, Liverpool, Glasgow, and Leeds, as
|
||
well as in many smaller places. Although instruction was given in
|
||
numerous subjects, including music, logic, and debating, chief
|
||
emphasis was placed upon courses in the sciences, As a rule, the
|
||
Secularist schools were open only on Sundays, though occasionally
|
||
a week night was utilized. Among those who taught or lectured
|
||
were such gifted individuals as Charles Watts, Dr. Edward B.
|
||
Aveling, Annie Besant, and Bradlaugh himself. To facilitate the
|
||
work, several manuals were used which were written by Secularist
|
||
teachers. Typical of these were Annie Besant's 'Heat, Light, and
|
||
Sound' (1881), 'General Biology' (1882), by Dr. Aveling, and
|
||
'Chemistry of the Home' (1881), by Bradlaugh's daughter, Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh. ["National Reformer," 1866-1890, passim;
|
||
"Freethinker," 1881-1890, passim; "National Secular Society's
|
||
Almanac," passim; Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), pp.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
65
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
246-251; A.S. Headingley, "Biography of Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1880), pp. 22 and 119; Hypatia Bradlaugh, "Chemistry of the
|
||
Home" (1881); Annie Besant, "Physiology of the Home" (1891);
|
||
Annie Besant, "Light, Heat and Sound" (1881).]
|
||
|
||
In furthering Secular education in non-Secular schools, both
|
||
before and after the Education Act of 1870 decreed the
|
||
establishment of non-denominational state schools as a supplement
|
||
to the state-aided Church schools, the Secularists worked for a
|
||
national system of state-controlled, state-supported schools
|
||
providing exclusively Secular education. In doing so they were
|
||
active in various ways. For one thing, they wrote and frequently
|
||
lectured. Then, too, numerous Secularists (including Dr. Aveling
|
||
and Mrs. Besant) secured positions as members of the elected
|
||
"boards of education" which controlled the state schools. And
|
||
Secularist parents often took advantage of a permissive clause in
|
||
the Education Act of 1870 to withdraw their children from
|
||
religious instruction in "board" schools." [G.J. Holyoake,
|
||
"English Secularism" (1896), pp. 61-62 and 70; Geoffrey West,
|
||
"The Life of Annie Besant" (1929), p. 89; Hypatia Bradlaugh
|
||
Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 264; Joseph McCabe, "Life
|
||
and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 40 and 51-53;
|
||
"Sugar Plums," "Freethinker," 1881-1890, passim; "National
|
||
Reformer," 1866-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Hand in hand with these various forms of agitation went the
|
||
campaign which the Secularists of the Bradlaugh period waged for
|
||
the removal of existing barriers to the free expression of
|
||
opinion. In this connection their action involved, first of all,
|
||
efforts to undermine the foundation of all such barriers by
|
||
developing in the public mind attitudes hostile to them. To this
|
||
end Secularist writers and speakers argued eloquently in favor of
|
||
intellectual freedom. Observe the ringing words of Annie Besant:
|
||
|
||
"I crave for every man, whatever be his creed, that his
|
||
freedom of conscience be held sacred. I ask for every man,
|
||
whatever be his belief, that he shall not suffer, in civil
|
||
matters, for his faith or his want of faith. I demand for
|
||
every man, whatever be his opinions, that he shall be able
|
||
to speak out with honest frankness the results of honest
|
||
thought, without forfeiting his rights as citizen, without
|
||
destroying his social position, and without troubling his
|
||
domestic peace. ..." [Annie Besant, "Civil and Religious
|
||
Liberty" (1882), pp. 20-21. See also the following: G.J.
|
||
Holyoake and Charles Bradlaugh, "Secularism, Science, and
|
||
Atheism" (1870), pp. 26-27; G.J. Holyoake, "Secularism, a
|
||
Religion Which Gives Heaven No Trouble" (1881), pp. 4-6 and
|
||
14; Charles Bradlaugh, "The Attitude of Freethought in
|
||
Polities," "National Reformer," January 27, 1894; and Annie
|
||
Besant, "Why Should Atheists Be Persecuted?" (1884).]
|
||
|
||
In addition to working for intellectual liberty in general
|
||
by trying to discredit collectively all barriers to it, the
|
||
Secularists endeavored to promote its achievement in limited
|
||
spheres by laboring to destroy various obstacles to it
|
||
individually. One of the most striking phases of this work was a
|
||
series of struggles to break down governmental interference with
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
66
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
the right of public meeting. The first such encounter occurred in
|
||
1866, when the Government issued orders forbidding the Reform
|
||
League to hold a meeting scheduled to take place on, July 23 in
|
||
Hyde Park. Bradlaugh, who was then cooperating with the League,
|
||
not only recommended that the meeting be held despite the orders
|
||
of the Government, but urged Secularists to attend it; and when,
|
||
as the crowds assembled for the meeting, the police manifested an
|
||
intention to use force to prevent it from being held, he helped
|
||
lead the assembled multitude to Trafalgar Square, where the
|
||
meeting took place. [A.S. Headingley, "Biography of Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 96-99; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 220-237; "National Reformer." July 22 and
|
||
29, 1866, and August 31, 1873.]
|
||
|
||
Another clash followed the prohibition by the Government of
|
||
a meeting in Trafalgar Square planned for July 31, 1871, by G.
|
||
Odger and some of his friends to protest against a governmental
|
||
grant to Prince Arthur. Bradlaugh joined with Odger in freshly
|
||
convoking the meeting, and, when the Government threatened and
|
||
prepared to use force, Bradlaugh reminded the Home Secretary, Mr.
|
||
Bruce, that the use of force would be illegal and would be
|
||
resisted. Some 30 minutes before the meeting was held, the
|
||
Government rescinded its prohibitory notice. [Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
"Another Victory Over the Government," "National Reformer,"
|
||
August 6, 1871; Charles Bradlaugh, "Autobiography of Mr. Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh," "National Reformer," August 31, 1873; A.S.
|
||
Headingley, "Biography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880), pp.
|
||
132-133.]
|
||
|
||
In 1872, after a group of individuals had been convicted for
|
||
holding meeting in Hyde Park on November 3 in violation of
|
||
certain regulations issued by Mr. Ayrton, Commissioner of Works,
|
||
Bradlaugh entered a third encounter with the authorities by
|
||
convoking a meeting for December 1 in the Park to protest against
|
||
the obnoxious restrictions. The meeting was allowed to be held,
|
||
and when Parliament met the regulations were annulled.
|
||
["National Reformer," November 24 and December 1 and 8, 1872, and
|
||
August 31, 1873.]
|
||
|
||
Finally, in 1888, Bradlaugh, then a member of Parliament,
|
||
endeavored, though unsuccessfully, to bring about a Parliamentary
|
||
inquiry into the conduct of the police on November 13, 1887, when
|
||
they violently interfered with a public meeting which the
|
||
Federation of Metropolitan Radical Clubs was holding in Trafalgar
|
||
Square." ["National Reformer," November 20, 1877, to March 18,
|
||
1888, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Side by side with all this went Secularist action looking to
|
||
the removal of existing limitations on free expression in the
|
||
press. One phase of this was efforts to get rid of the Security
|
||
Laws -- enactments, it will be recalled, which stipulated that
|
||
newspapers must provide security against seditious or blasphemous
|
||
utterances. The fight against the Security Laws was brought on in
|
||
1868. Following the example of Secularist periodicals such as the
|
||
Reasoner and the Investigator, and, indeed, of numerous other
|
||
papers, Bradlaugh had brought out the 'National Reformer' since
|
||
its foundation without providing the security called for by the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
67
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Security Laws. For the eight years during which the paper had
|
||
been published the Government had ignored the situation. In fact,
|
||
the general enforcement of the Security Laws had for several
|
||
years been so ineffectual that they were really obsolescent. This
|
||
was the state of affairs in 1868 when the Government brought on
|
||
the Secularist campaign against the Security Laws by requesting
|
||
Bradlaugh to provide security against blasphemous or seditious
|
||
utterances in the National Reformer, and, upon his refusal to do
|
||
so, by prosecuting him for publishing the National Reformer
|
||
without providing the security. In carrying on the struggle the
|
||
Secularists worked both in the court room and in the country at
|
||
large. In the court room, Bradlaugh, who argued his own case,
|
||
frustrated the designs of the Government at almost every turn,
|
||
and so discouraged it in its efforts to carry forward the
|
||
prosecution to a successful conclusion that in the end it allowed
|
||
the case to be dropped. In the country at large, the Secularists
|
||
not only raised substantially all the funds required for meeting
|
||
Bradlaugh's expenses in connection with the litigation, but
|
||
worked directly for the repeal of the Security Laws by holding
|
||
meetings and filing petitions with Parliament. The two-fold
|
||
course of action on the part of the Secularists, together with
|
||
cooperating efforts by Milnor Gibson, John Stuart Mill, E.H.J.
|
||
Cranford, and other Members of Parliament, produced effective
|
||
results. The Government, discouraged at last in its efforts to
|
||
enforce the Security Laws, and impressed by the general
|
||
agitation, decided to repeal the obnoxious statutes -- a decision
|
||
which it carried out before the end of the year 1869. ["National
|
||
Reformer," May 3, 1868, to May 2, 1861). passim; Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh Bonner, "Penalties Upon Opinion" (2 Ed., 1913). pp,
|
||
78-80; Charles Bradlaugh, "Autobiography of Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1873), pp. 19-20; C.D. Collet, "History of the Taxes on
|
||
Knowledge" (1899), pp. 146-207.]
|
||
|
||
There were two other phases of the action taken by the
|
||
Secularists in behalf of an unrestricted freedom of the press,
|
||
both of which were tied up, though in different ways, with the
|
||
prosecution of Secularists for circulating pamphlets favorable to
|
||
birth control. The first phase grew out of the trial of Charles
|
||
Watts for publishing Dr. Knowlton's The Fruits of Philosophy,,
|
||
and the second was connected with the trial, fine, and
|
||
imprisonment of Edward Truelove for selling Moral Physiology, by
|
||
Robert Dale Owen, and Individual, Family, and National Poverty,
|
||
by H.H. Palmer. With regard to the first phase, after Watts,
|
||
instead of fighting the charge against him on the strength of his
|
||
right to publish, had pleaded guilty and had been released under
|
||
suspended sentence (1877), the Secularist body as a whole,
|
||
apprehending the danger which the case involved to the liberty of
|
||
the press (and to the cause of birth control), itself entered
|
||
into a struggle with the authorities. Bradlaugh and Annie Besant,
|
||
who played the leading roles in the fight, boldly issued their
|
||
own edition of the Knowlton pamphlet, and, when brought to trial
|
||
for doing, so, defended their action (and the cause of a free
|
||
press) in the courts, At the same time, Secularists raised the
|
||
funds needed for the payment of the legal expenses of Bradlaugh
|
||
and Mrs. Besant, and the Secularist writers brought the whole
|
||
affair prominently before the public in terms favorable to the
|
||
free-press Cause. ["National Reformer," April 1, 1877, to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
68
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
December, 29, 1878, passim; Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893),
|
||
p. 231; Geoffrey West, "Life of Annie Besant" (1929), pp. 90-96;
|
||
Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), II,. 20-29;
|
||
J.M. Robertson, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1920), pp. 58-63; Irene
|
||
Clephane, "Towards Sex Freedom" (1935), pp. 102-108; Norman E.
|
||
Himes, "Medical History of Contraception" (1936), pp. 239-240.]
|
||
|
||
As for the phase of Secularist action which was related to
|
||
the prosecution of Edward Truelove, the Secularists gave Truelove
|
||
(and the cause) support by writing sympathetically in the
|
||
Secularist press, by raising funds which covered the defendant's
|
||
expenses in the case, and by vainly presenting memorials to the
|
||
Home Secretary asking for the prisoner's release. ["National
|
||
Reformer," May 20, 1877, to December 29, 1878. passim; Norman E.
|
||
Himes, "Medical History of Contraception" (1936), pp. 240-243;
|
||
Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), p. 231.]
|
||
|
||
As a further part of their efforts in the interest of
|
||
intellectual freedom within limited spheres, the Secularists of
|
||
the Bradlaugh period worked for the equality of every form of
|
||
opinion in the eyes of the law. To this end they endeavored, for
|
||
one thing, to secure the right of affirmation instead of oath-
|
||
taking for all persons not already eligible to affirm -- in a
|
||
word, for the non-religious. The first two or three years of the
|
||
period under discussion witnessed a considerable amount of such
|
||
activity. Encouraged by the Executive of the National Secular
|
||
Society, Secularists in all parts of the country sent petitions
|
||
to Parliament. Bradlaugh communicated privately with Members of
|
||
Parliament and wrote in the National Reformer. Holyoake, who was
|
||
especially energetic in his efforts, urged witnesses to decline
|
||
the oath, drew up petitions, delivered lectures, and interviewed
|
||
Members of Parliament. [National Reformer," December 6, 1868, to
|
||
March 20, 1870, passim; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 288-289; G.J. Holyoake, "English
|
||
Secularism" (1896), p. 119; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters, of
|
||
George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 46-49.]
|
||
|
||
This early agitation came to a close when, in August, 1869,
|
||
there was passed the Evidence Further Amendment Act, the fourth
|
||
section of which declared:
|
||
|
||
"If any person called to give evidence in any court of
|
||
justice whether in a civil or criminal procedure, shall
|
||
object to take an oath, or shall be objected to as
|
||
incompetent to take an oath, such person shall, if the
|
||
presiding judge is satisfied that the taking of an oath
|
||
would have no binding effect on his conscience, make a
|
||
promise or declaration." ["The Acts of Parliament Bearing
|
||
upon the Question of Affirmation," "National Reformer,"
|
||
January 31, 1875; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 286; "Oath," "Chambers'
|
||
Encyclopedia."]
|
||
|
||
The Secularists had good reason to rejoice not only at the
|
||
enactment of section four of the Evidence Further Amendment Act,
|
||
but because their agitation had helped prepare Members of
|
||
Parliament for favorable action on it. John Stuart Mill wrote to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
69
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Holyoake: "You may justly take to yourself a good share of the
|
||
credit of having brought things to that pass." [Joseph McCabe,
|
||
"Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 46-48;
|
||
G.J. Holyoake, "The Warpath of Opinion" (189?); G.J. Holyoake,
|
||
"English Secularism" (1896), p. 119; G.J. Holyoake, "Bygones
|
||
Worth Remembering" (1905) II, 209-210; "Holyoake, George Jacob,"
|
||
"Chambers' Encyclopedia"; Charles Bradlaugh. "The Oath Question,"
|
||
"National Reformer," May 16, 1869; "Secular Progress," "National
|
||
Reformer," June 20, 1869; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 288-289.]
|
||
|
||
Before many weeks had elapsed, however, the Secularists were
|
||
made forcibly aware that the legislation extending the right of
|
||
affirmation was by no means as inclusive as their interests
|
||
demanded. The Act went into effect on August 9, 1869. In December
|
||
of the same year Bradlaugh, who was then plaintiff in a lawsuit
|
||
in the Court of Common Pleas, was not permitted to testify before
|
||
an arbitrator appointed to ascertain a special fact in the case.
|
||
It will be recalled that the act of 1869 had used the term
|
||
"presiding judge." The arbitrator in question declined to receive
|
||
Bradlaugh's evidence on the ground that, as merely an arbitrator,
|
||
he was not a presiding judge and so was not qualified under the
|
||
act to satisfy himself as to whether the taking of an oath would
|
||
have no binding effect on Bradlaugh's conscience. ["National
|
||
Reformer," December 12, 1869, to January 30, 1870, passim; and
|
||
August 31, 1873.]
|
||
|
||
Although Bradlaugh, after appealing in vain to the Court of
|
||
Common Pleas to direct the arbitrator to accept his testimony,
|
||
carried his case to the Court of Exchequer Chamber and, in May,
|
||
1870, was heard (and given a verdict in his own favor), the
|
||
Secularists did not wait until the outcome of the case was known
|
||
to do something about the situation in which the refusal of
|
||
Bradlaugh's testimony had shown them to be placed. Upon the
|
||
refusal of the Court of Common Pleas to direct the arbitrator to
|
||
receive Bradlaugh's evidence, they began a course of action by
|
||
which they sought to get section four of the Evidence Further
|
||
Amendment Act amended in such manner as to give to all
|
||
commissioners and other officers and persons authorized to
|
||
administer or take oaths or depositions in any civil or criminal
|
||
proceedings, power to take affirmation in lieu of oath in the
|
||
same manner as had been by the said section enacted that a
|
||
presiding judge might with reference to witnesses before any
|
||
court. Under the leadership especially of Bradlaugh, Secular
|
||
societies and individuals sent to Parliament more than 200
|
||
petitions on the subject. Bradlaugh, Charles Watts, and Austin
|
||
Holyoake agitated in the National Reformer. Bradlaugh wrote to
|
||
Members of Parliament. ["National Reformer," January 2, 1870, to
|
||
April 28, 1878, passim; A.S. Headingley, "Biography of Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 119-123 and 124-125.]
|
||
|
||
All this led George Denman, M.P., and other political
|
||
leaders to become interested in the matter, and to the passage,
|
||
in August, 1870, of the Evidence Amendment Act, by which the
|
||
fourth section of the Evidence Further Amendment Act was amended
|
||
in such a way as to meet the situation revealed in the Bradlaugh
|
||
case. The exact words of the act are these:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
70
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"The words 'court of justice,' and the words 'presiding
|
||
judge,' in section four of the ... Evidence Further
|
||
Amendment Act, 1869, shall be deemed to include any person
|
||
or persons having by law authority to administer an oath."
|
||
[A.S. Headingley, "Biography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880),
|
||
pp. 119-123; "Conference of the National Secular Society,"
|
||
"National Reformer," October 2, 1870; "The Acts of
|
||
Parliament Bearing on the Question of Affirmation,"
|
||
"National Reformer," January 31, 1875.]
|
||
|
||
Even after the act of 1870 had been passed, the legislation
|
||
permitting affirmation of Freethinkers did not cover all
|
||
situations in which they might wish to affirm, nor did either the
|
||
act of 1869 or that of 1870 extend to Scotland. The result was
|
||
that the Secularists soon began to demand a further remedial
|
||
enactment. They endeavored now to have the law applied to the
|
||
United Kingdom in its entirety, and to get it broadened so as to
|
||
permit heretical jurymen to affirm instead of taking an oath, and
|
||
so as to follow the substitution in the case of Freethinkers of
|
||
solemn declarations for affidavits in interlocutory proceedings.
|
||
Their efforts along these lines were exerted between 1873 and
|
||
1880, and were for the most part made up of the filing with
|
||
Parliament of petitions. Through the agency of the National
|
||
Secular Society, 85 petitions, with 8,806 signatures were
|
||
presented in a single Parliamentary session; and many additional
|
||
petitions were presented in other sessions. [Charles Watts,
|
||
"Retrospect of 1876," "National Secular Society's Almanac for
|
||
1877" (1876), p.. 16; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 278; "National Reformer," January 5, 1873,
|
||
to June 16, 1978, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Secularist agitation for the extension of the right of
|
||
affirmation was uninterruptedly continued for eight years after
|
||
1880. Indeed, the period from 1880 to 1888 witnessed a campaign
|
||
more spirited and more extensive in scope than that of the
|
||
preceding seven years. At the same time, the objective sought was
|
||
(ultimately) more comprehensive than it had been in the earlier
|
||
period. The campaign in the 80's can be better understood after a
|
||
hasty glance at the Bradlaugh Parliamentary Struggle, inasmuch as
|
||
this Parliamentary conflict was tied up with the question of the
|
||
right of Bradlaugh (and by implication the right of secular-
|
||
minded persons generally) to be admitted to Membership in
|
||
Parliament (having been duly elected) by making an affirmation of
|
||
allegiance, or even by taking the customary oath.
|
||
|
||
In 1880 Bradlaugh was elected by the voters of the Borough
|
||
of Northampton to Membership in the House of Commons. Upon
|
||
presenting himself for the purpose of being seated by the House,
|
||
Bradlaugh asked to be permitted to affirm instead of taking the
|
||
oath, basing his claim upon the Evidence Amendment Acts, 1869 and
|
||
1870, which as will be recalled, permitted affirmation in courts
|
||
of justice, and upon the parliamentary Oaths Act, 1866 (as
|
||
amended), which gave the right to affirm in Parliament to Quakers
|
||
and all other persons "for the time being permitted by law to
|
||
make an affirmation in lieu of taking an oath." A Select
|
||
Committee, appointed by the House to give consideration to
|
||
Bradlaugh's request, denied his right to affirm. He then
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
71
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
announced his intention of taking the oath. Again a Select
|
||
Committee was appointed by the House to look into the matter, and
|
||
this body declared against his being allowed to take the oath,
|
||
asserting, by way of justification for the decision, that in
|
||
their judgment an oath would have no binding effect on his
|
||
conscience; but the Committee went on to recommend that he be
|
||
allowed to affirm at his legal peril. The House rejected the
|
||
recommendation of the Committee that Bradlaugh be allowed to
|
||
affirm. Bradlaugh then again presented himself and asked to be
|
||
sworn, but a hostile majority of the House peremptorily refused
|
||
to permit him to take the oath, and, upon his refusal to
|
||
withdraw, had him removed by the Sergeant-at-arms to the Clock
|
||
Tower of the House, where he was held until the following day. A
|
||
few days later, Gladstone, then Prime Minister, moved that
|
||
Members-elect be permitted to affirm, at their legal peril; and,
|
||
when the motion was carried, Bradlaugh took his seat. But upon
|
||
his first voting, the matter was carried into the courts, and, in
|
||
the spring of 1881, his seat was declared vacated. All this was
|
||
only a part of the contest. For almost five years after Bradlaugh
|
||
was Unseated the struggle continued in the House of Commons (from
|
||
the precincts of which Bradlaugh was on one occasion forcibly
|
||
ejected by four messengers and 10 policemen after a terrific
|
||
struggle), in the courts, and in the country at large, where
|
||
Secularists and other supporters of Bradlaugh wrote, held
|
||
hundreds of indignation meetings, signed petitions, and raised
|
||
expense funds, and where the opposition expressed its attitude
|
||
through meetings, petitions, and denunciations. Finally, after
|
||
Bradlaugh was elected for the fifth time by his Northampton
|
||
supporters, in the general election of 1885, a new Speaker,
|
||
ruling that a motion to prevent Bradlaugh from taking the oath
|
||
would be out of order, allowed him to take his seat (January 13,
|
||
1886). ["National Reformer," March 14, 1880, to January 24,
|
||
1886, passim; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1894), Part One, I, 144, 263-279, and 392-400, and Part Two (by
|
||
J.M. Robertson), pp. 203-367 and 370; Annie Besant, "Annie
|
||
Besant" (1893), pp. 253-276 and 313-314.
|
||
Holyoake always refused to take the oath, and publicly
|
||
criticized Bradlaugh, in the course of the Parliamentary
|
||
struggle, for being, willing to take it in the House of Commons.
|
||
"N.S.S. Conference," "National Reformer," June 12, 1881; Annie
|
||
Besant, "Oath-Taking," "National Reformer," May 8, 1881; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "Bygones Worth Remembering" (1905), I, 28; G.J.
|
||
Holyoake, "The Warpath of Opinion" (189?), pp. 41-50.]
|
||
|
||
The Bradlaugh Parliamentary Struggle was colored by other
|
||
things than the legal rights (or disabilities) of heretical
|
||
Members-elect of Parliament. Religious animosity pure and simple
|
||
was back of a great deal of the hostility to Bradlaugh's being
|
||
permitted to take his seat. Dislike for Bradlaugh's Republicanism
|
||
and for his advocacy of family limitation through contraception
|
||
were also factors in the conflict. Political intrigue, too,
|
||
played a part -- as when the so-called Fourth Party, composed of
|
||
Lord Randolph Churchill and other Conservatives, endeavored with
|
||
hypocritical piety to embarrass the Liberal Prime Minister,
|
||
Gladstone, who, though religious, was not disposed to make
|
||
trouble for Bradlaugh, by making a noisy issue of the Bradlaugh
|
||
case. [R.C.K. Ensor, "England, 1870-1914" (1936), pp. 67-68; John
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
72
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Morley, "Life of Gladstone" (1903), III, 11-21; J.M. Robertson,
|
||
"A History of Freethought in the 19th Century" (1930), II,
|
||
427-429 and 433.] Despite these facts, the Secularists quickly
|
||
realized, as the conflict got under way, that more-inclusive
|
||
legislation in the interest of affirmation for Freethinkers was
|
||
needed than already existed or had been felt by the Secularists
|
||
to be needed. They saw clearly that there was needed legislation
|
||
which would not only embrace what they had for the past seven
|
||
years been seeking but would include also the assurance that
|
||
freethinking Members-elect of Parliament who objected to taking
|
||
the oath or who were objected to as incompetent to take the oath
|
||
might be seated through making an affirmation. Accordingly, a
|
||
Secularist course of action looking to such legislation was
|
||
undertaken, though, thanks to the circumstances of the moment,
|
||
the entire program was not always worked for at a given time.
|
||
|
||
From 1880 to 1885 the action of the Secularists took the
|
||
form of efforts to secure the passage of a law permitting
|
||
affirmation to Members-elect in Parliament. When, in the early
|
||
stages of the Bradlaugh Parliamentary Struggle, a bill
|
||
authorizing affirmation in Parliament was twice unsuccessfully
|
||
introduced by Henry Labouchere, Member for Northampton, the
|
||
Secularists supported it by holding meetings and sending
|
||
petitions to Parliament. And when the government, in 1883, vainly
|
||
attempted the passage of a Parliamentary affirmation bill, the
|
||
Secularists petitioned Parliament in its favor. ["National
|
||
Reformer," April 17, 1881, to March 25, 1883, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Beginning early in 1885 the Secularist agitation assumed a
|
||
broader form. There was introduced into Parliament at this time,
|
||
by C.H. Hopwood, a bill permitting affirmation to all persons in
|
||
every situation where the existing law called for an oath. On
|
||
Bradlaugh's initiative, the Secularists made this broader aim
|
||
their own, and supported the Hopwood bill by sending petitions to
|
||
Parliament. In the following year, they worked through
|
||
resolutions and petitions for the passage of a bill, which,
|
||
introduced by Sergeant Simon (later Sir John Simon) after the
|
||
failure of Hopwood's measure to become a law, substituted
|
||
affirmation for oath-taking in all cases outside courts of
|
||
justice -- though in supporting this bill they did so in the
|
||
expectation that it would be amended in the committee stage so as
|
||
to conform truly to their aims. The most impressive action which
|
||
the Secularists took in support of their broader program,
|
||
however, was taken after Simon's measure had been blocked, and
|
||
was in connection with the affirmation legislation which
|
||
Bradlaugh himself sponsored. ["National Reformer," 1885-1886,
|
||
passim.]
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh did not introduce his bill immediately upon
|
||
becoming recognized as a Member of Parliament, inasmuch as at
|
||
that time, as has been seen, he and his Secularist colleagues
|
||
were supporting Simon's measure. Indeed, he did not originally
|
||
plan to introduce the bill at all. As arranged at the outset --
|
||
that is, after the failure of Simon's measure -- Simon himself
|
||
was to bring in a bill exactly along the lines envisaged by the
|
||
Secularists. But Simon's health became uncertain and it was
|
||
agreed that the new measure be taken in charge by Bradlaugh.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
73
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Backed by Secularist and other supporters, the bill was first
|
||
introduced in 1887, but was blocked. Bradlaugh again brought it
|
||
forward in January, 1888, and this time -- aided by petitions and
|
||
resolutions from Secularists and others -- carried it forward to
|
||
a successful conclusion. As enacted the measure was exactly as
|
||
the Secularists desired it, except for a few relatively
|
||
inconsequential words which said that for the individual to enjoy
|
||
the right to affirm he must state either that he is without
|
||
religious belief or that the taking of an oath is not in keeping
|
||
with his religious belief. The exact language of the bill -- the
|
||
so-called Oaths Act -- is as follows:
|
||
|
||
"Every person upon objecting to being sworn, and
|
||
stating, as the ground of such objection, either that he has
|
||
no religious belief, or that the taking of an oath is
|
||
contrary to his religious belief, shall be permitted to make
|
||
his solemn affirmation instead of taking an oath in all
|
||
places and for all purposes where an oath is or shall be
|
||
required by law, which affirmation shall be of the same
|
||
force and effect as if he had taken the oath."
|
||
|
||
The Oaths Act became law near the close of 1888. ["National
|
||
Reformer," December 26, 1886, to January 20, 1889, passim;
|
||
Centenary Committee, "Champion of Liberty: Charles Bradlaugh"
|
||
(1933), pp. 322-323.]
|
||
|
||
Thus, thanks to the Secularists and those who cooperated
|
||
with them, the unrestricted right of affirmation for non-
|
||
religious persons ultimately became a reality. The fact that the
|
||
gain was only achieved in piecemeal fashion over a period of many
|
||
years simply brings more forcibly to the attention the
|
||
earnestness and conscientious sincerity of those who achieved it.
|
||
|
||
Along with their affirmation campaign, the Secularists of
|
||
the Bradlaugh epoch undertook two other lines of action to secure
|
||
equality before the law for all forms of opinion. They endeavored
|
||
to achieve the disestablishment of the State Church, and they
|
||
worked for the repeal of the blasphemy laws. In their efforts
|
||
looking to the disestablishment of the State Church the
|
||
Secularists of the period under discussion were active in a
|
||
variety of ways. Bradlaugh, in 1886, voted as a Member of
|
||
Parliament for Henry Richard's motion' for the disestablishment
|
||
of the Church in Wales and in favor of Dr. Cameron's motion to
|
||
disestablish the Church in Scotland. Annie Besant wrote several
|
||
tracts urging the disestablishment of the Church of England. And
|
||
Bradlaugh, Mrs. Besant, G.W. Foote, and numerous other Secularist
|
||
speakers pleaded the cause of disestablishment from rostrums in
|
||
all parts of the country. [Annie Besant, "Threatenings and
|
||
Slaughters" (1886); Annie Besant, "For the Crown and Against the
|
||
Nation" (1886); "National Secular Society's Almanac for 1887"
|
||
(1886); "National Reformer," 1886-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
The campaign which the Secularists of the Bradlaugh era
|
||
carried on for the repeal of the blasphemy laws was for quite a
|
||
number of years a rather lifeless one. Despite warnings from
|
||
Bradlaugh, the Secularists as a body were disposed to feel -- as
|
||
once they had done in earlier days -- that the blasphemy laws
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
74
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
were obsolete, and that agitation against them was unnecessary.
|
||
Nevertheless, they did send to Parliament a number of petitions
|
||
on the subject. ["National Secular Society's Almanac for 1977"
|
||
(1876), p. 16; "National Reformer," 1866-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
This apathetic agitation was still in progress when, in the
|
||
early 80's, some four or five Secularists were prosecuted on the
|
||
charge of violating the blasphemy laws. The first case was
|
||
brought on at the behest of Sir Henry Tyler, M.P., and involved
|
||
an indictment for publishing or causing to be published certain
|
||
"blasphemous libels" in the Freethinker of May 28, 1882. At the
|
||
outset the charge was made against Foote, the editor, W.J.
|
||
Ramsey, the publisher, and E.W. Whittle, the printer; but, early
|
||
in the proceedings, the name of Bradlaugh was added to the list
|
||
of those indicted, on the ground that he was really the man
|
||
higher up in the case, and that of Whittle, the mere printer,
|
||
withdrawn. Bradlaugh was able to secure a separate trial for
|
||
himself, and, by establishing the claim that he was not the
|
||
publisher of the Freethinker on the date of May 28, was
|
||
acquitted. At the trial of Foote and Ramsey, the Lord Chief
|
||
Justice Coleridge, in summing up, liberally interpreted the law
|
||
of blasphemy, asserting, in effect, that an attack on even the
|
||
fundamentals of religion constituted blasphemy only if the
|
||
decencies of controversy were violated. When the jury returned
|
||
from its deliberations, it reported that it was unable to agree,
|
||
and before a scheduled new hearing took place the prosecutor
|
||
applied to the Attorney-General for a 'nolle prosequi.' This was
|
||
granted, and the case ended. Even before the above proceedings
|
||
were terminated, another prosecution was begun and carried to a
|
||
successful conclusion. In this instance "the City of London" took
|
||
action against Foote, Ramsey, and H.A. Kemp, respectively the
|
||
editor, publisher, and printer of the Freethinker, for publishing
|
||
"blasphemous libels" in the Christmas, 1882, number of the
|
||
Freethinker. Two trials were required for the disposal of the
|
||
case, as the original jury failed to reach an agreement. At the
|
||
second trial the jury pronounced the defendants guilty, and Mr.
|
||
Justice North, who presided at the trials and who manifested an
|
||
unsympathetic attitude towards the defendants, sentenced them to
|
||
imprisonment -- Foote for twelve, Ramsey for six, and Kemp for
|
||
three months. The Executive of the National Secular Society
|
||
sponsored a memorial to the Secretary of State for the Home
|
||
Department requesting a remission of the sentences imposed on the
|
||
convicted Secularists, but the memorial was rejected, and the
|
||
three men served out their sentences. ["National Reformer," July
|
||
16, 1882, to May 20, 1883, passim; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner,
|
||
"Penalties Upon Opinion" (2 ed., 1912), pp. 83-90; Annie Besant,
|
||
"Annie Besant" (1893), pp. 292-298; G.W. Foote, "The Blasphemy
|
||
Laws." "Freethinker." January 7, 1906; J,M. Robertson, "History
|
||
of Freethought in the 19th century" (1930), II, 430-433,]
|
||
|
||
The prosecution of Foote and his fellow defendants, and
|
||
especially the conviction and imprisonment of Foote, Ramsey, and
|
||
Kemp, tended to arouse the Secularists from their state of apathy
|
||
in regard to the blasphemy laws, so that in the remaining years
|
||
of the Bradlaugh period they carried on a somewhat more spirited
|
||
campaign against them. From time to time resolutions were passed
|
||
and petitions sent to Parliament. Mrs. Besant wrote articles on
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
75
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
the subject. The National Secular Society, early in 1884, became
|
||
affiliated with the Association for the Repeal of the Blasphemy
|
||
Laws (of which the Honorary Secretary was the Rev. W. Sharmon),
|
||
while in May of the same year Bradlaugh, Dr. Aveling, and Foote
|
||
spoke at one of the great public meetings which the Association
|
||
held in St. James's Hall, London. In 1886, in 1887 (with
|
||
reservations), and in 1888, Secularist support was given to anti-
|
||
blasphemy-law bills which Courtney Kenny, M.P., sought in vain to
|
||
carry through Parliament. Finally, Bradlaugh, with the backing of
|
||
his Secularist followers, tried in Parliament, without success,
|
||
to have the blasphemy laws repealed through the enactment of his
|
||
Religious Prosecutions Abolition Bill (1889). ["National
|
||
Reformer," 1882-1890, passim; "Freethinker," 1882-1890, passim;
|
||
Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake"
|
||
(1908), 11, 145; Anne Besant, "Blasphemy" (1882); Annie Besant,
|
||
"Annie Besant" (1893), p. 288; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), Part Two (by J.M. Robertson), p. 405; Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh Bonner, "Penalties Upon Opinion" (2 ed., 1913), pp.
|
||
98-99.]
|
||
|
||
ANTI-CHURCH ACTIVITIES
|
||
|
||
In carrying on agitation which not only looked to the wide
|
||
acceptance of Secularism as a system of ethics, but which aimed
|
||
to promote its practical application through the achievement of
|
||
reforms in the political, social, and intellectual spheres of
|
||
society, the Secularists of the Bradlaugh period followed a
|
||
course of action pursued by the earlier Secularists. As was the
|
||
case, too, with the Secularists of the preceding era, there was
|
||
among the Secularists of the years from 1866 to 1890 an unceasing
|
||
effort to undermine the strength of the churches, indeed, the
|
||
Secularists of the Bradlaugh epoch engaged more generally in this
|
||
type of endeavor than did their predecessors. Whereas in the
|
||
earlier period a decreasing number of Secularists declined to
|
||
engage in this work, practically all Secularists participated in
|
||
it during the later era.
|
||
|
||
A discussion of some of the more typical of the combative
|
||
actions taken by the Secularists will be sufficient to
|
||
characterize the Secular campaign. One thing they did was to
|
||
place before the people biographical sketches of celebrated
|
||
Freethinkers, hoping to contribute to the undermining of
|
||
orthodoxy by showing that these persons -- and not the
|
||
theologians -- had been the true benefactors of mankind. Brief
|
||
sketches of Bruno, Campanella, Spinoza, Galileo, John Stuart
|
||
Mill, and other Rationalists appeared, and Joseph Mazzini
|
||
Wheeler, in 1889, brought out a Biographical Dictionary of
|
||
Freethinkers of All Ages and Nations. Wheeler's Dictionary
|
||
contained more than 1,600 names. [G.W. Foote and Charles Watts,
|
||
"Heroes and Martyrs of Freethought" (1875); J.M. Wheeler,
|
||
"Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers of All Ages and Nations"
|
||
(1889). See also the following: Annie Besant, "Giordano Bruno"
|
||
(1877), and Arthur B. Moss "Bruno and Spinoza" (1885).]
|
||
|
||
The Secularists also attempted to discredit the Bible. In
|
||
order to show that, instead of being a divine revelation, it was
|
||
simply a man-made document, they challenged its consistency, its
|
||
science, its historical veracity, its morality, and its reputed
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
76
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
authorship. Thus in an exhaustive treatment of the first 11
|
||
chapters of the first book of the Old Testament entitled
|
||
'Genesis: Its Authorship and Its Authenticity' (1882), Bradlaugh
|
||
attempted to show: "1. That the Book of Genesis is unhistoric,
|
||
that it is not the work of any one writer, but is made up of
|
||
several documents, belonging to different ages, pieced together
|
||
after the lapse of many centuries, often clumsily, and sometimes
|
||
without regard to relevancy. 2. That the narrative is sometimes
|
||
self-contradictory, and that it is often contradicted by other
|
||
books of the Bible. 3. That its chronological statements are, on
|
||
the face of them, absurdly inaccurate, and that they are
|
||
overwhelmingly contradicted by history and modern discovery. 4.
|
||
That the Genesaic teachings on ethnology, geology, astronomy,
|
||
zoology, and botany are flatly in opposition to the best
|
||
knowledge in each of these sciences. And, 5. That such teachings
|
||
of the book as relate to morality would be destructive of human
|
||
happiness, if generally adopted. [Charles Bradlaugh, "Genesis:
|
||
Its Authorship and Authenticity" (1982), Preface. See also:
|
||
"Freethinker's Text-Book" (1881?), Parts I and II; Charles Watts,
|
||
"Christian Evidences Criticized" (1870); G.W. Foote and W.P.
|
||
Ball, "The Bible Handbook for Freethinkers and Inquiring
|
||
Christians" (1888); Charles Watts, "Science and the Bible
|
||
Antagonistic" (1874): Joseph Symes, "Christianity at the bar of
|
||
Science" (1881); G.W. Foote, "The Creation Story" (1882); Charles
|
||
Watts, "The Bible and Christianity" (1876); and Charles Watts,
|
||
Value of the Bible" (1882).]
|
||
|
||
Another thing the Secularists did was to attempt to
|
||
undermine the belief that Christianity was divinely established
|
||
-- by showing it to be a natural growth. As Annie Besant
|
||
expressed the situation:
|
||
|
||
"Every one who has studied the subject knows perfectly
|
||
well that Christianity, both in its myths and its doctrines,
|
||
is an outcome of many Eastern creeds. To Judaism it
|
||
admittedly owes much, but Judaism was itself an offshoot of
|
||
a mightier and wider Eastern religion, and borrowed its
|
||
legends wholesale from Persia and from lands lying yet
|
||
further eastward, as well as from the hoary faith of its
|
||
Egyptian neighbors. The roots of Christianity strike deep
|
||
into Judea and Hindustan, into Persia and Egypt; from each
|
||
it has drawn much: from each it has taken something ...: and
|
||
when we seek for the creator of Christianity we find no
|
||
awful Divine form, breathing life into a figure created by
|
||
its will; but we see the fingers of mystic Hindu, and
|
||
dignified fire-worshiper, of barbarous Jew and subtle
|
||
Egyptian, all working at the growing creed, molding into new
|
||
shape the plastic clay of human superstition, fashioning a
|
||
Mary from an Isis and a Devaki, sculpturing a Jesus from a
|
||
Buddha, an Osiris, and a Krishna, and presenting renovated
|
||
for the adoration of the modern world the Gods worn out by
|
||
the old." [Annie Besant, "Roots of Christianity: or, the
|
||
Christian Religion Before Christ" (1886). See also Charles
|
||
Watts, "Christian Evidence, (criticized" (197?). and
|
||
"Freethinker's Text-Book," Part II.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
77
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
The Secularists endeavored, too, to destroy confidence in
|
||
particular doctrines characteristic of Christianity -- such as
|
||
the doctrine of rewards and punishments after death and the
|
||
doctrine of the efficacy of prayer. The doctrine that prayers are
|
||
answered, for example, was attacked energetically by Foote, Mrs.
|
||
Besant, and others. Foote, in his Letter's to the Clergy (1890),
|
||
asserted that belief in prayer goes hand in hand with ignorance
|
||
of natural causes:
|
||
|
||
"There was a time when Christians prayed against an
|
||
eclipse -- because they did not understand its causes. ...
|
||
They still pray. ... against bad weather. ... When they do
|
||
understand its causes, they will cease praying against it,
|
||
and confine their supplications to what is still contingent.
|
||
... Contingency is nothing but ignorance. ... Where light
|
||
obtains, you find we have nothing to do but submit to ...
|
||
the necessity of nature."
|
||
|
||
And in the same treatise Foote went on to declare:
|
||
|
||
"Is Prayer answered? ... I look abroad in the world,
|
||
and find no practical recognition of the efficacy of Prayer.
|
||
No Life Assurance Company would calculate a sovereign's life
|
||
policy on the ground that her subjects asked God to 'grant
|
||
her in health and wealth long to live.' No Fire Insurance
|
||
Company would grant a policy on a House of Prayer unless a
|
||
lightning conductor were run up to prevent the Deity from
|
||
making a mistake in a thunderstorm. Underwriters never think
|
||
of asking whether the captain prays. ... When the Peculiar
|
||
People use prayer, without ... medicine, they are browbeaten
|
||
by Christian coroners and jurymen. ... Mr. Francis Gaiton
|
||
... keen scientific writer points out that in all the
|
||
medical literature of modern Europe he has been unable to
|
||
discover 'any instance in which a medical man of any repute
|
||
... attributed recovery to ... prayer. ... By the aid of
|
||
historical and statistical tables, Mr. Galton discovers no
|
||
trace of Prayer as an efficient cause. ... President
|
||
Garfield's life ebbed slowly away amid a nation's prayers
|
||
for his recovery. ..." [G. W. Foote, "Letters to the
|
||
Clergy" (1890); Annie Besant, "What Is the Use of Prayer?"
|
||
(1884); G.W. Foote, "The Futility of Prayer" (1879).]
|
||
|
||
Finally, a great deal of effort was exerted by the
|
||
Secularists in an attempt to show that the Church had been a
|
||
hindrance to civilization down through the centuries, They
|
||
declared that it long condoned the institution of slavery. They
|
||
asserted that it systematically encouraged belief in witchcraft
|
||
and took the lead in urging repressive measures against witches.
|
||
They affirmed that it had a cruel record as a persecuting
|
||
institution. They charged that it had impeded the growth of
|
||
science and general education. They averred that it had been
|
||
guilty of countless crimes, forgeries, and pious frauds. And they
|
||
contended that it had chronically stood out against social
|
||
reform. Mrs. Besant summed up the Secular indictment of the
|
||
historical role of the Church in these scornful words:
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
78
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"Thus Christianity set itself against all popular
|
||
advancement, against all civil and social progress, against
|
||
all improvement in the condition of the masses. It viewed
|
||
every change with distrust, it met every innovation with
|
||
opposition. ... Only as Christianity has grown feebler has
|
||
civilization strengthened, and progress has been made more
|
||
and more rapidly as a failing creed has lost the power to
|
||
oppose...." ["Freethinker's Text-Book" (1881?), pp.
|
||
423-476. See also the following: G.W. Foote, Christianity
|
||
and Progress" (1888)' Annie Besant, "The Fruits of
|
||
Christianity" (1878); Charles Watts, "Christianity: Its
|
||
Nature and Influence on Civilization" (1868); Joseph Symes,
|
||
"Christianity and Slavery" (1880); J.M. Robertson, "What Has
|
||
Christianity Done?" (187?); G.W. Foote and J.M. Wheeler,
|
||
"Crimes of Christianity" (188?); and Charles Bradlaugh,
|
||
"Humanity's Gain from Unbelief" (1889).]
|
||
|
||
THE ATTACK UPON SECULARISM
|
||
|
||
As was the case in the first era of Secularist history, so
|
||
now in the Bradlaugh period opposition to Secularism appeared in
|
||
the ranks of clerical and lay supporters of Christianity. Indeed,
|
||
throughout the greater part of the Bradlaugh era, a more
|
||
extensive anti-Secular campaign was waged than had been in
|
||
evidence during the earlier epoch of Secularist history -- no
|
||
doubt because in these Bradlaugh years the Secular Movement was a
|
||
stronger and more menacing force than it had been in its early
|
||
days. Sometimes the opposition took the form of nothing less than
|
||
rowdyism. At Deptford, Brighton, and other places Secularist
|
||
meetings were broken up by organized bands. When Annie Besant was
|
||
departing from Hoyland, after delivering a lecture there in 1876,
|
||
a crowd attempted to overturn her carriage. In 1867, at Mexbro, a
|
||
mob threw stones that shattered the windows of a hall in which
|
||
Charles Watts was lecturing, and at Congleton, in 1876, stones
|
||
were sent crashing through the windows of a hall in which a
|
||
meeting was being held by Bradlaugh. In 1875 Mrs. Besant was met
|
||
by stones at Darwen. On numerous occasions Secularist speakers
|
||
were assaulted, or jostled from their platforms, or greeted with
|
||
yells and hisses. [Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), pp.
|
||
199-201; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894),
|
||
passim; Gertrude Marvin Williams, "The Passionate Pilgrim"
|
||
(1931), p. 67; G.W. Foote, "Letters to the Clergy" (1890),
|
||
Preface, p. 4; Charles Watts, "Secular Progress in 1880."
|
||
"British Secular Almanac for 1881" (1880), p. 9; "National
|
||
Reformer," 1966-1890, passim; "Freethinker." 1881-1890, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Annoyance, misrepresentation, and abuse of Secularists
|
||
played their part in the opposition to Secularism. Bradlaugh was
|
||
frequently referred to as an extremely coarse and vulgar person,
|
||
or as a man of contemptible morals. On April 3, 1869, at Blyth,
|
||
he was refused food and shelter at the inns. And we have seen
|
||
that, though repeatedly elected to membership in the House of
|
||
Commons, he was for years prevented from taking his seat.
|
||
Scurrilous attacks were made upon Annie Besant, and she was
|
||
subjected to humiliating and painful experiences. Permission to
|
||
use the garden of the Royal Botanic Society in connection with
|
||
her studies was denied her on the ground that the daughters of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
79
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
the curator used it. Despite the fact that Thomas Huxley and
|
||
others signed a memorial to the contrary, she (with Bradlaugh's
|
||
daughter Alice) was refused admittance to the class in practical
|
||
botany at the University of London. Other Secularists, too, came
|
||
in for unpleasant treatment, and there were derogatory statements
|
||
directed against the Secularist body as a whole. [Mrs. Humpbrey
|
||
Ward, "The History of David Grieve" (ed. of 1892), pp. 104 105;
|
||
"National Reformer," (1866-1890), passim; Hypatia Bradlaugh
|
||
Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), passim; Chapman Cohen,
|
||
"Bradlaugh and Ingersoll" (1933), pp. 46-52; Annie Besant, "Annie
|
||
Besant" (1893), pp. 170-175.]
|
||
|
||
Legal action, as will be recalled, was utilized as a means
|
||
of combating Secularism in the Bradlaugh epoch. For one thing,
|
||
quite a number of Secularists, including virtually all those of
|
||
the top rank in ability and influence, were prosecuted. The first
|
||
person proceeded against was Bradlaugh himself. In 1868 he was
|
||
called into the courts by the Government for refusing, in
|
||
violation of the obsolescent Security Laws, to provide security
|
||
against blasphemous or seditious utterances in the National
|
||
Reformer. The efforts of the Government in this case were not
|
||
altogether successful, however, thanks to Bradlaugh's skillful
|
||
defense of himself, and eventually the prosecution was dropped.
|
||
Early in 1877 Charles Watts was prosecuted for publishing Dr.
|
||
Charles Knowlton's birth-control pamphlet. 'The Fruits of
|
||
Philosophy;' but as Watts, who pleaded guilty, declared his
|
||
ignorance of the contents of the book and disavowed any illegal
|
||
intentions in connection with the publication of it, he was
|
||
released under suspended judgment. Two months later "the
|
||
corporation of the City of London" prosecuted Bradlaugh and Mrs.
|
||
Besant for defiantly publishing their own edition of the Knowlton
|
||
pamphlet on the heels of the Watts case, and succeeded in having
|
||
them sentenced to six months' imprisonment, though the sentence
|
||
was later quashed on a legal technicality. In 1878, at the
|
||
instigation of the Society for the Suppression of vice, Edward
|
||
Truelove was tried, imprisoned for four months, and compelled to
|
||
pay a fine of 50 pounds for selling birth-control pamphlets --
|
||
'Moral Physiology', by Robert Dale Owen, and J.H. Palmer's
|
||
'Individual, Family, and National Poverty.' Legal steps were
|
||
taken against Bradlaugh in connection with the Bradlaugh
|
||
Parliamentary Struggle. After Bradlaugh had been permitted to
|
||
affirm and to take his seat at his legal peril (1880), he was
|
||
proceeded against in the courts so effectively that he was
|
||
temporarily unseated (1881). In 1882 Sir Henry Tyler, M.P.,
|
||
secured the prosecution of Foote and J.H. Ramsey on the charge of
|
||
publishing or causing to be published "blasphemous libels" in the
|
||
Freethinker: but the jury was unable to agree, and the case was
|
||
ended when the Attorney General granted a nolle prosequi at the
|
||
prosecutor's request. In 1882, also, "the City of London"
|
||
prosecuted Foote, Ramsey, and H.A. Kemp for publishing
|
||
"blasphemous libels" in the Freethinker, and did so with such
|
||
success that all three defendants suffered imprisonment -- Kemp
|
||
for three months. Ramsey for six months, and Foote for twelve
|
||
months. [The source materials for the above prosecutions are
|
||
listed in earlier foot-notes of this chapter -- in those
|
||
subjoined to previous discussions of the episodes in question.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
80
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Legal action against Secularism not only assumed the shape
|
||
of the prosecution of Secularists but took other forms. On the
|
||
ground that the Propagation of secularism was in violation of the
|
||
Blasphemy Laws, the courts, when appealed to, refused to permit
|
||
legacies to Secular bodies to pass into their hands. In 1869 an
|
||
arbitrator appointed to ascertain a special fact in a lawsuit
|
||
involving Bradlaugh in the Court of Common Pleas refused to allow
|
||
Bradlaugh to give evidence. Because she held and advocated
|
||
heretical opinions, the courts, in 1879, at the instance of her
|
||
former husband, the Rev. Frank Besant, deprived Annie Besant of
|
||
the custody of her child -- the daughter that had been awarded to
|
||
her at the time of her legal separation from her husband.
|
||
["Liberty of Bequest," "Freethinker,," December 17, 1893;
|
||
"National Reformer," December 12, 1869, to May 22, 1870, and
|
||
April 28, 1877, to April 20, 1879, Passim; A.S. Headingley,
|
||
"Biography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1880), pp. 119-123; Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 284-289; Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "Autobiography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1873), p. 21;
|
||
J.M. Robertson, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1920), pp. 21-22; Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh Bonner, "Penalties Upon Opinion" (2 ed., 1913), pp.
|
||
81-82; Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), pp. 113-220; Geoffrey
|
||
West, "The Life of Annie Besant" (1929), pp. 96-101.]
|
||
|
||
There were still other types of opposition to Secularism in
|
||
the Bradlaugh era. Many times the rental of halls was either
|
||
refused the Secularists or their use forbidden them (usually as a
|
||
result of pressure) after contracts had been signed. Discourses
|
||
against Secularism were also delivered from time to time. The
|
||
Christian Evidence Society, for example, sent out lecturers over
|
||
a period of years who labored energetically, sometimes even
|
||
appearing on the platform at the Secularist Hall of Science in
|
||
London. Attacks upon Secularism appeared, too, in the form of
|
||
publications. Opposition in periodical publications, such as the
|
||
'Eastern Post' and the 'Tissue,' usually took the form of hostile
|
||
reports of Secularist lectures, while systematic criticism of
|
||
Secularism appeared in such non-periodical treatises as
|
||
'Heterodox London: or Phases of Freethought in the Metropolis'
|
||
(1874). by Dr. Maurice Davies, a clergyman of the Church of
|
||
England. Finally, anti-Secularist opposition was expressed by
|
||
persons who debated with Secularists and by those earnest
|
||
individuals who replied from the audience to Secularist speakers.
|
||
["National Reformer," for the Bradlaugh era, passim;
|
||
"Freethinker." June, 1881, and November 20, 1892; Hypatia
|
||
Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I, passim; Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh, "Autobiography of Charles Bradlaugh" (1873), passim;
|
||
A.S. Headlingley, "Biography of Charles Bradlaugh (1880), pp.
|
||
99-100; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob
|
||
Holyoake" (1908), II, 60.]
|
||
|
||
The opposition to Secularism in the Bradlaugh era not only
|
||
fired the Secularists to greater exertion in behalf of their
|
||
program, but helped familiarize the public with the rising
|
||
Secularist ideas; and the net result of all this was that the
|
||
cause of Secularism was strengthened.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
81
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
ASSOCIATION WITH ORGANIZED INTERNATIONAL
|
||
FREETHOUGHT
|
||
|
||
British Secularism was not from first to last an isolated
|
||
and detached concern. In the course of the Bradlaugh epoch it
|
||
began to maintain a connection with international organized
|
||
Freethought. The opportunity for such affiliation came with the
|
||
formation, in 1880, of the International Federation of
|
||
Freethinkers which, organized on the initiative of the
|
||
Freethinkers of Belgium, held meetings from time to time, in such
|
||
urban centers as Amsterdam, Paris, London, and Brussels, for the
|
||
discussion of Freethought matters. British Secularism was
|
||
represented on the Council of the Federation, and delegates for
|
||
the British Secularists attended Federation meetings. In 1936 the
|
||
name International Federation of Freethinkers was changed to the
|
||
World Union of Freethinkers. Secularist affiliation with the
|
||
international body did not appreciably affect the aims,
|
||
practices, or fortunes of the British Secular Movement.
|
||
["National Reformer," passim; "Freethinker," passim; British
|
||
Secular Almanac for 1881" (1880), p. 10.]
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER IV
|
||
|
||
THE FOOTE-COHEN ERA
|
||
|
||
PROPORTIONS OF THE SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Because of the conditions discussed early in these pages,
|
||
the British Secular Movement, from its beginning to the year
|
||
1885, was, on the whole, a growing enterprise. In 1865, the year
|
||
preceding the formation of the National Secular Society, there
|
||
were in existence about 25 local Secular societies. In 1885 there
|
||
were some four or five independent local bodies and 102 branches
|
||
of the National Secular Society. The total number of Secularists
|
||
in 1871 included slightly more than 1,000 members of the National
|
||
Secular Society plus a smaller number of persons attached to
|
||
local independent societies. In 1880 the total Secularist
|
||
enrollment embraced approximately 6,000 affiliates of the
|
||
National Secular Society together with a handful of other
|
||
persons. Though the total Secular membership in 1885 is not
|
||
precisely calculable, it was larger than in 1880 [It will be
|
||
observed that the above statements relative to the number of
|
||
Secularists refer to total enrollment, and not simply to the
|
||
number of individuals who had paid their dues. Estimates as to
|
||
paid-up membership would undoubtedly assume smaller proportions.
|
||
|
||
"Reasoner," 1851-1861, passim; "National Reformer,"
|
||
1861-1885, passim; "Freethinker," 1881-1885, passim; "Secular
|
||
Review and Secularist," passim; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner,
|
||
"Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), passim; Joseph McCabe, "Life and
|
||
Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), passim; "National
|
||
Secular Society's Almanack for 1886" (1885), pp. 16 and 47.]
|
||
|
||
The history of the Secular Movement from 1885 to 1946 was
|
||
marked by no such success. In fact, though there were times when
|
||
the Movement increased in numerical strength, the long-range
|
||
tendency was toward fewer Secular societies and a smaller number
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
82
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
of Secularists. In 1890, the last year of the Bradlaugh epoch,
|
||
there were three or four local independent bodies and
|
||
approximately 62 branches of the National Secular Society. In
|
||
1946 some 32 branches of the national organization existed along
|
||
(possibly) with one independent society. Exact membership figures
|
||
for the period are not available, but it may be said the
|
||
Secularist leaders of these years did not claim unprecedented
|
||
numbers. ["Freethinker," 1885 ff., passim; "National Reformer,"
|
||
1885-1893, passim; "Secular Almanack," passim; H. Percy Ward, "To
|
||
the Secular Party," "Truth Seeker," April 1903; Joseph McCabe,
|
||
"Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), 11, 261.]
|
||
|
||
By the end of the Bradlaugh period, then, the British
|
||
Secular Movement had already attained its largest proportions and
|
||
had entered upon a long period of lessened success. This adverse
|
||
development was connected with the mitigation of the harsh
|
||
circumstances which had oppressed the working classes and which
|
||
therefore inspired the Secular Movement. When the Secular
|
||
Movement began to languish, these unfavorable conditions had,
|
||
indeed, been extensively ameliorated. The political submergence
|
||
of the working classes, to begin with, was by no means so
|
||
complete as it once had been. It is true that the hereditary
|
||
element persisted in the government, and that woman suffrage had
|
||
not been introduced. Nevertheless, the Reform Act of 1867, which
|
||
granted the right of voting to the bulk of the male workers in
|
||
the cities, had been passed, as well as the Reform Act of 1884,
|
||
which admitted the mass of rural workmen to the suffrage; and, as
|
||
a consequence, the interests of the great masses of the people
|
||
could no longer be so readily flouted.
|
||
|
||
The economic and social condition of the working classes was
|
||
somewhat improved. While long hours of work, low wages,
|
||
unfavorable living conditions, and slight opportunity for
|
||
wholesome recreation were still the order of the day, and while
|
||
security against the hazards of unemployment, sickness, and
|
||
invalidity were still unprovided for, the situation of the
|
||
laboring masses, at least in the cities, was not so desperate as
|
||
it once had been. Wages were on the whole not quite so low, and
|
||
hours of work not quite so long. Then, too, recreational
|
||
opportunities were somewhat improved -- thanks to the
|
||
introduction of Sunday music in the parks and to the opening on
|
||
Sundays of various libraries, art galleries, and museums.
|
||
|
||
Educational facilities for the poor had undergone favorable
|
||
development. Though a nation-wide. system of government-
|
||
controlled schools providing in all cases Secular education did
|
||
not exist. the government had set up schools -- following the
|
||
Education Act of 1870 -- in localities where the private schools
|
||
were not providing educational training, and had authorized the
|
||
officials in these state schools to withhold religious
|
||
instruction from any child whose parent or guardian requested
|
||
that it be withheld.
|
||
|
||
Barriers and threats to intellectual freedom, too, were less
|
||
in evidence. Interference with the popular platform and press did
|
||
now and then take place. Equality before the law for every shade
|
||
of opinion, however, was less far from achievement than had
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
83
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
earlier been the case. It is true that discriminations were still
|
||
the rule. The right of Freethinkers to affirm instead of taking
|
||
the oath, for instance, did not exist in all cases: it was not
|
||
operative in Scotland, and even in England it was not extended to
|
||
Members-elect of Parliament or to jurymen, nor was it permitted
|
||
in interlocutory proceedings. Then, too, the State Church
|
||
continued as before, and the blasphemy laws remained unrepealed.
|
||
Nevertheless, headway had been made through the passage of the
|
||
Evidence Amendment Acts (1869 and 1870), which granted to non-
|
||
religious persons the right of affirmation in courts of justice.
|
||
|
||
Finally, the Church was beginning to be somewhat less out of
|
||
harmony with working-class interests. Though most Churchmen
|
||
remained in large part occupied with other worldly affairs and
|
||
with supporting traditional upper-class interests, a somewhat
|
||
increased number were now active on behalf of improved conditions
|
||
for the masses. In the Church of England the Guild of St.
|
||
Matthew, which had been founded in 1877, and which manifested the
|
||
same interest in the welfare of the workers that had been shown
|
||
by Maurice and Kingsley, was encouraging dissatisfaction with
|
||
existing abuses. Indeed. the Rev. Stuart Headlam, who was the
|
||
foremost propagandist associated with the Guild. was as tireless
|
||
in his efforts to improve the welfare of the masses as any
|
||
Secularist. And in the free churches friends of such popular
|
||
causes as democracy, social reform, secular education, and Church
|
||
disestablishment were active.
|
||
|
||
The seduction of the evils which prompted the Secular
|
||
Movement naturally weakened the incentive to a campaign against
|
||
them; and when the stimulus to action had been sufficiently
|
||
undermined, the waning of the Secular Movement began.
|
||
|
||
ADMINISTRATIVE AFFAIRS
|
||
|
||
The event bringing to a close the Bradlaugh period and
|
||
marking the advent of a new epoch in Secularist history was the
|
||
resignation of Bradlaugh as President of the National Secular
|
||
Society. Bradlaugh resigned on the heels of a serious illness
|
||
which left him without the strength requisite for doing all that
|
||
he had been doing since the beginning of 1886, which, as will be
|
||
recalled, involved labors in Parliament as well as among the
|
||
Secularists. Even before sickness had overtaken him, however,
|
||
Bradlaugh had already intimated to the National Secular Society,
|
||
at its Annual Conference in the spring of 1889, that he expected
|
||
to retire from the presidency after one more year of service. It
|
||
is probable that Bradlaugh desired to expend the major portion of
|
||
his remaining energies within the precincts of Parliament, and
|
||
that action upon this desire was precipitated by illness.
|
||
Bradlaugh's resignation was offered (and regretfully accepted) on
|
||
February 16, 1890. ["National Reformer." October 27, 1889, to
|
||
February 23, 1890; "Freethinker," June 16 and November 17, 1889,
|
||
and December 30, 1906; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1894), Pt. One, II, 87 and 89-90, and Pt. Two (by
|
||
J.M. Robertson), 408-411.]
|
||
|
||
The proffer and acceptance of the resignation of Bradlaugh
|
||
took place at a special general meeting in London, of the members
|
||
of the National Secular Society which had been convoked by
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
84
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, and at this same meeting G.W. Foote was elected by
|
||
acclamation as Bradlaugh's successor. ["Resignation of Mr.
|
||
Bradlaugh," "National Reformer," February 23, 1890; G.W. Foote.
|
||
"To the Members of the National Secular Society," "Freethinker,"
|
||
February 23, 1890.]
|
||
|
||
After a generation of militant service as President of the
|
||
National Secular Society, Foote died (October 17, 1915), and was
|
||
succeeded in office by Chapman Cohen, who, in November, 1946, was
|
||
still occupying the post. ["Freethinker," 1890-1946; "National
|
||
Reformer," 1890-1893.]
|
||
|
||
Since we are already well acquainted with Foote, it will be
|
||
necessary at this point only to make a few introductory
|
||
statements concerning Chapman Cohen. Though philosophically
|
||
inclined, Cohen is also interested in practical reform, and is
|
||
thus well suited by temperament to serve as Secularist leader. He
|
||
also possesses abilities useful to the head of a propagandist
|
||
organization, in that he is a cogent writer and speaker. And the
|
||
amount of labor he has devoted to the Secularist cause year after
|
||
year is nothing less than prodigious. In view of all this, it is
|
||
not surprising that his services as President of the National
|
||
Secular Society have evoked general satisfaction among his
|
||
colleagues.
|
||
|
||
Cohen was born of Jewish parentage on September 1, 1868, at
|
||
Leicester. His formal educational training was slight, but he
|
||
read persistently on his own initiative, particularly in the
|
||
field of philosophy. Largely through his philosophical studies,
|
||
he developed views compatible with Secularism, and in 1889 began
|
||
to lecture in the Secular Movement. Beginning in 1895, he was
|
||
elected each year as a Vice-President of the National Secular
|
||
Society. Early in his career as a Secularist he was recognized as
|
||
Foote's chief colleague, and his election to succeed Foote as
|
||
President of the National Secular Society came in fulfillment of
|
||
a general expectation. [Chapman Cohen, "Almost an Autobiography"
|
||
(1940), pp. 26-123; "Truth Seeker," March, 1895; "Cohen,
|
||
Chapman," "Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists"
|
||
(1920), by Joseph McCabe; J.M. Robertson, "A History of
|
||
Freethought in the 19th Century" (1930), II, 590; "Freethinker,"
|
||
October 23, 1892, to April 23, 1936, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Inasmuch as the administrations of Foote and Cohen had much
|
||
in common, the history of the Secular Movement in the period
|
||
extending from 1890 to 1946 may conveniently be surveyed as a
|
||
unit; and since Foote and Cohen, each in his day, were the
|
||
outstanding leaders of the Movement, the period may fittingly be
|
||
designated as the Foote-Cohen era.
|
||
|
||
The doctrines and purposes of the Secularist Movement in the
|
||
Bradlaugh era, which themselves, either explicitly or by
|
||
implication, were essentially those of the earlier Secularist
|
||
epoch, continued, with slight variations, to be those which
|
||
underlay Secularist action throughout the Foote-Cohen epoch,
|
||
Though no complete enumeration of them appears in any single
|
||
document, a satisfactory description of their more general
|
||
features is contained in a statement entitled "Principles and
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
85
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Objects" which was issued in 1935, while a document "Immediate
|
||
Practical Objects of the National Secular Society" (1893)
|
||
contains an adequate account of their details.
|
||
|
||
The document bearing the title "Principles and Objects" runs
|
||
as follows:
|
||
|
||
"Secularism affirms that this life is the only one of
|
||
which we have knowledge, and that human effort should be
|
||
wholly directed towards its improvement; it asserts that
|
||
supernaturalism is based upon ignorance, and assails it as
|
||
the historic enemy of progress.
|
||
|
||
"Secularism affirms that progress is only possible on
|
||
the basis of equal freedom of speech and publication; it
|
||
affirms that liberty belongs of right to all and that the
|
||
free criticism of aLl ilcdit5D$ignation as Vice-President of
|
||
the National Secular Society occurring on February 26, 1890,
|
||
her last contribution to the National Reformer appearing in
|
||
the issue of April 8, 1891, and her final appearance on a
|
||
Secularist platform not taking place, despite a "farewell
|
||
speech" delivered to Secularists on August 30, 1891, until
|
||
1893. [Annie Besant, "Why I Became a Theosophist" (1889);
|
||
Annie Besant, "Annie Besant" (1893), pp. 202-203, 299-306,
|
||
306 ff., 314, 320-321, and 329-364; "National Reformer, "
|
||
1884-1893, passim; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh" (1893), Pt. One, 1, 14-15, and Pt. Two (by J.M,
|
||
Robertson), pp. 63, 382-383, and 407; "Mrs. Besant on
|
||
Herself and Others," "Freethinker," January 25, 1891; "Sugar
|
||
Plums," "Freethinker," August 6, 1905; G.W. Foote, "The New
|
||
Year." "Freethinker," January 1, 1893; H.M. Hyndman,
|
||
"Further Reminiscences," (1912), p. 6.]
|
||
|
||
J.M. Robertson abandoned the Movement. He withdrew from the
|
||
Executive of the National Secular Society, in 1892, because of
|
||
displeasure over a decision made by the Executive as to the
|
||
disposition of funds contributed toward a memorial for Bradlaugh.
|
||
In May, 1893; after the fore-going action of the Executive was
|
||
approved by the Annual Conference of the National Secular
|
||
Society, he resigned his membership in the Society. He
|
||
disappeared entirely in October, 1893, when the National
|
||
Reformer, the editorship of which he had assumed, as will be
|
||
seen, upon Bradlaugh's death, failed. ["National Reformer,"
|
||
1891-1893, passim; "Freethinker," 1891-1905, passim.]
|
||
|
||
On January 22, when in his 89th year, Holyoake died.
|
||
Holyoake's Secularist activity, which was less extensive in the
|
||
Bradlaugh period than in the preceding era, had lessened still
|
||
more in the Foote-Cohen epoch, in fact, his services for many
|
||
years were definitely limited. There were intervals, indeed, when
|
||
he held himself almost entirely aloof from Secular circles. No
|
||
doubt all this was due to his disapproval of the extent to which
|
||
anti-Christian agitation was carried on by the bulk of the
|
||
secularist party, as well as to a critical attitude which he
|
||
often manifested towards his successors in the chieftainship of
|
||
the Secular Movement, and (latterly) to his advanced years. But
|
||
whatever the causes, his comparative inactivity was a fact.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
86
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Nevertheless, throughout all this time he was identified with the
|
||
Movement, and even after the beginning of the Foote-Cohen era had
|
||
served for four years as a Vice-President of the National Secular
|
||
Society and for some two years (though no doubt merely nominally)
|
||
as President of the British Secular League. Now at last, however,
|
||
death withdrew him. ["Freethinker," July 24, 1892, to February
|
||
4, 1906, passim); "National Reformer," January 17, 1867, to June
|
||
4, 1893, passim; Joseph McCabe, "Life and Letters of George Jacob
|
||
Holyoake" (1908), I, 334, and II, passim; J.M. Robertson, "A
|
||
History of Freethought in the 19th Century" (1930), II, 440;
|
||
Hypitia Bradlaugh Bonner, "Charles Bradlaugh" (1894), I, 35.]
|
||
|
||
In 1891 occurred an event which gave promise of offsetting
|
||
to some degree the loss of the services of these well-known
|
||
persons. Charles Watts, who upon the failure of the British
|
||
Secular Union had accepted a Freethought "pastorate" in Canada,
|
||
returned to Great Britain and once more became affiliated with
|
||
the National Secular Society. ["National Reformer," 1866-1892,
|
||
passim; "Freethinker," 1890-1906, passim; F.J, Gould, "The
|
||
Pioneers of Johnson's Court" (1929), p. 6; William Kent, "London
|
||
Heretics" (1932), pp, 72-74,]
|
||
|
||
For several years Watts labored for the Secularist cause, as
|
||
a writer and speaker, and as a Vice-President of the National
|
||
Secular Society. But these efforts were destined to come to a
|
||
close sooner than might generally have been expected. In the
|
||
Freethinker for March 17, 1901, an unusual and interesting
|
||
advertisement made its appearance. It declared that George
|
||
Anderson (a Secularist) had invited Charles A. Watts (son of
|
||
Charles Watts and founder of the Rationalist Press Association),
|
||
in conjunction with a few trusted friends, to arrange for the
|
||
building of a Freethought Institute in London, to the cost and
|
||
endowment of which Anderson was to contribute 15,000 pounds after
|
||
the like sum had been contributed by others. The advertisement
|
||
went on to state the aim of the promoters was to establish a
|
||
comprehensive society embracing all sections of the Freethought
|
||
and ethical movements, and to request those in sympathy with the
|
||
project to communicate with Charles A. Watts. Although the scheme
|
||
discussed in the advertisement fell through, it led (among other
|
||
things) to the cessation of Watts' Secularist labors. Foote, who
|
||
declared he had not been consulted by the promoters, and who
|
||
resented the whole affair, charged Watts with being secretly
|
||
connected with the project and with aspiring to be the resident
|
||
lecturer of the Institute. Watts denied the charge, but the two
|
||
men grew increasingly embittered. Finally, in July, 1902, Watts
|
||
resigned his office of Vice-President of the National Secular
|
||
Society and the Executive of the National Secular Society (who
|
||
sided with Foote) countered by erasing Watts's name from the
|
||
rolls of the Society. Watts then became a lecturer for the
|
||
Rationalist Press Association. ["National Reformer," 1991-1893,
|
||
"Freethinker," 1894-1906, passim.]
|
||
|
||
It will be recalled, of course, that in 1915 G.W. Foote
|
||
died, and that more than half a century ago Chapman Cohen began
|
||
his long career of distinguished leadership in the Movement.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
87
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
PRINTED MATTER
|
||
|
||
Secularist efforts to assist in the propagation of
|
||
Secularism by means of publications of one sort or another were
|
||
continued in the Foote-Cohen era and met with a mixture of
|
||
success and failure. In the field of periodical publications, an
|
||
early development was the failure of the National Reformer. The
|
||
circulation of the Reformer had already begun to decline when, on
|
||
the death of Bradlaugh, J.M. Robertson assumed the editorship,
|
||
prepared in the main to follow the editorial policies so long
|
||
pursued by Bradlaugh himself. Inasmuch as under Robertson's
|
||
editorship subscriptions continued to fall off, there was no
|
||
choice but to bring the existence of the journal to an end. The
|
||
final issue of the paper was that of October 1, 1893. ["National
|
||
Reformer," February 22, 1891, to October 1, 1893, passim;
|
||
"Robertson, Rt. Hon. John MacKinnon," "Biographical Dictionary of
|
||
Modern Rationalists" (1920), by Joseph McCabe; "Robertson, Rt.
|
||
Hon. John MacKinnon," "Who's Who" (British), 1932; Joseph McCabe,
|
||
"Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 254.]
|
||
|
||
In 1894 the merchant, J.W. Gott, together with one John
|
||
Grange and a man named Wakefield, launched at Bradford a
|
||
Secularist journal called the Truth Seeker. Starting as a monthly
|
||
publication, the paper later was issued at irregular intervals.
|
||
The advocacy of Secularist principles and Freethought agitation
|
||
both appeared in its pages. The Truth Seeker was a regional
|
||
paper, serving primarily the district around Bradford. After a
|
||
few years the Truth Seeker went out of existence apparently in
|
||
1905. ["National Secular Society's Conference," "Freethinker,"
|
||
May 20, 1894; "Truth Seeker," 1894-1905; "Sugar Plums,"
|
||
"Freethinker," August 4, 1901.]
|
||
|
||
A Secularist local journal, the monthly Leicester Reasoner,
|
||
was started by F.J. Gould, Secretary of the Leicester Secular
|
||
Society, in March, 1902. With the issue of February, 1903,
|
||
however, this paper died. ["Sugar Plums," "Freethinker," March
|
||
10 and November 9, 1902, and January 4, 1903; "Leicester Secular
|
||
Society and Institute," "Freethinker," Nov. 23, 1902.]
|
||
|
||
As a possible means of reaching a wider public than was
|
||
reached by the militant Freethinker, Foote undertook the
|
||
publication of a Secularists monthly journal bearing an
|
||
"inoffensive" title and adopting a policy which was less
|
||
aggressive. The new periodical -- which was named the Pioneer --
|
||
was brought out on January 1, 1903. Though such "notorious"
|
||
Secularists as Foote and Cohen wrote for the paper, they used
|
||
pseudonyms, in an effort to attract readers that might otherwise
|
||
be frightened away. The new venture was not successful. The
|
||
readers of the Pioneer, in general, turned out to be persons who
|
||
were already reading the Freethinker. The paper did not make
|
||
converts for Secularism, and, besides, it failed to pay its way
|
||
financially. In less than 18 months after it made its initial
|
||
appearance, its existence was terminated. ["Sugar Plums,"
|
||
"Freethinker," November 23 and December 21, 1902; G.W. Foote,
|
||
"The Pioneer," "Freethinker," June 5, 1904.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
88
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Upon the death of Foote in 1915, the Freethinker passed into
|
||
the editorial hands of Mr. Chapman Cohen, who rededicated the
|
||
paper to the Secularist cause, and who conducted it year after
|
||
year with the same fearless aggressiveness as that practiced for
|
||
almost 35 years by his predecessor. In the autumn of 1946, though
|
||
the Freethinker had attained a longevity far exceeding that of
|
||
any other Secularist periodical, it still manifested the spirit
|
||
of youth. ["Freethinker," all numbers; Chapman Cohen, "Almost an
|
||
Autobiography," (.1940), pp. 118-135.]
|
||
|
||
As in former years, the Secularists of the era under
|
||
consideration were able to issue publications calculated to
|
||
propagate Secularist and anti-theological principles books and
|
||
pamphlets by Secularists and others. Conspicuous in the list were
|
||
such works as J.W. Draper's 'History of the Conflict Between
|
||
Science and Religion,' and biographies such as Joseph McCabe's
|
||
'George Jacob Holyoake,' J.M. Robertson's 'Charles Bradlaugh,'
|
||
C.T. Gorham's 'Robert Ingersoll,' J.M. Robertson's 'Voltaire,'
|
||
and Guy A. Aldred's 'Richard Carlile.' This propagandist work of
|
||
the Secularists suffered a blow in connection with the present
|
||
war. Many of the publications ready for distribution from the
|
||
headquarters of the National Secular Society in London were
|
||
destroyed, on May 10, 1941, by fire resulting from an enemy air
|
||
raid; and the production of new copies -- any new treatises --
|
||
was rendered difficult by the shortage of paper. ["Freethinker,"
|
||
1890-1946. passim; "Truth Seeker," passim; "Secular Almanack,"
|
||
passim; Executive of the National Secular Society, "General
|
||
Information for Freethinkers" (1921), p. 10.]
|
||
|
||
A succession of publishing -- or printing and publishing --
|
||
concerns in London served the Secularists of the Foote-Cohen
|
||
period. The Bradlaugh-Besant firm -- the Freethought Publishing
|
||
Company -- which had been founded in 1877, entered the new epoch,
|
||
but soon afterwards was dissolved. One cause of the dissolution
|
||
was, of course, the intellectual differences which had developed
|
||
between Bradlaugh and Annie Besant -- differences which carried
|
||
Mrs. Besant out of the Secularist Movement. Another factor in the
|
||
situation was Bradlaugh's declining health. A third reason for
|
||
the step was the fact that the expensive Fleet Street
|
||
establishment, even in those early days of waning Secularist
|
||
strength, was fast becoming an intolerable financial burden. The
|
||
dissolution took place in December, 1890. ["National Reformer,"
|
||
August 3 and December 21, 1890; Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner,
|
||
"Charles Bradlaugh" (1893), Pt. One, II, 15, and Pt. Two (by J.M.
|
||
Robertson), pp. 47 and 48; Geoffrey West. "Life of Annie Besant"
|
||
(1929), pp. 106-109.] Robert Forder now became the Secularist
|
||
publisher -- at 28 Stonecutter Street; but in 1899 a Freethought
|
||
Publishing Company, Limited, was formed by Foote, and Forder
|
||
became (for a time) one of its Directors. At first the
|
||
Freethought Publishing Company, Limited, was located at 28
|
||
Stonecutter Street, but in April, 1900, No. 1 Stationer's Hall
|
||
Court became its address, and it moved to No. 2 Newcastle Street
|
||
in March, 1902. In July of the same year it added printing to its
|
||
activities. The Freethought Publishing Company, Limited, was not
|
||
successful financially, and in 1908 it was dissolved. Foote now
|
||
operated for Secularist purposes a personally owned concern --
|
||
The Pioneer Press, Located at the outset at 2 Newcastle Street,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
89
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
the Pioneer Press was moved, on March 25, 1915, to 61 Farrington
|
||
Street. Upon the death of Foote, in 1915, the Pioneer Press was
|
||
converted into a company -- G.W. Foote and Company, Limited --
|
||
with nearly the whole of the shares being held initially) by Mrs.
|
||
Foote. This concern -- often referred to as "The Pioneer Press
|
||
(G.W. Foote and Company, Limited) -- remained at 61 Farringdon
|
||
Street until the premises were destroyed by fire on May 10, 1941.
|
||
Soon after the fire a new location was found at 2 and 3 Furnival
|
||
Street, Holborn. In September, 1945, the address of the firm
|
||
became 41 Gray's Inn Road. ["National Reformer," August. 3,
|
||
1890; "Freethinker," 1890-1946, passim; "Secular Almanack,"
|
||
passim.]
|
||
|
||
PUBLIC OCCASIONS
|
||
|
||
The meetings which the Secularists held on Sundays in
|
||
Secular halls, the Secular outdoor meetings in the parks, the
|
||
debates between Secularists and non-Secularists, and the Secular
|
||
ceremonies utilized in connection with the naming of the children
|
||
of Secularists and with Secularist funerals continued in the
|
||
Foote-Cohen era to be prominent features of organized Secularism.
|
||
Both with respect to their character and the arrangements
|
||
attending them, these exercises followed along the lines
|
||
previously laid down. There were, however, certain new
|
||
developments in connection with them, and these should be
|
||
noticed.
|
||
|
||
As an addition to the song books already available for use
|
||
in connection with meetings arranged by the Secularists, one of
|
||
the most devoted and industrious of Secularists, Joseph Mazzini
|
||
Wheeler, compiled in the first decade of the era under
|
||
consideration a work entitled 'Freethought Readings and Secular
|
||
Songs.' The selections contained in the volume were expressive of
|
||
the Secularist ideal of devotion to individual and social well-
|
||
being, and included compositions by Algernon Charles Swinburne,
|
||
Giordano Bruno, Leigh Hunt, Omar Khayyam, Margaret Fuller,
|
||
William Shakespeare, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and many other
|
||
writers. [J.M. Wheeler, "Freethought Readings and Secular Songs"
|
||
(189?).]
|
||
|
||
A Secular song book was also compiled, at the request of
|
||
Sidney Gimson and F.J. Gould, of the Leicester Secular Society,
|
||
by Emily Josephine Troup. The volume was entitled 'Hymns of
|
||
Modern Thought,' and was published in 1900. It contained music
|
||
along with the words of the pieces: included in it, and gave
|
||
expression to the social aspiration associated with Secular
|
||
doctrine. [F.J. Gould, "Life-Story of a Humanist" (1922), p.
|
||
91.]
|
||
|
||
The lists of Secularists who at one time or another in the
|
||
new era were prominent in connection with Secularist meetings and
|
||
debates, as well as the list of non-Secularists who in the course
|
||
of the period enjoyed prominence in debate against the
|
||
Secularists, differed, of course, from earlier lists. Among the
|
||
outstanding Secularist lecturers in the new era were Foote, Mrs.
|
||
Thorton Smith, Touzeau Perris, Arthur B. Moss, J.M. Robertson,
|
||
Charles Watts, Holyoake, W. Heaford, Joseph Symes, Stanley Jones,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
90
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Cohen, J.T. Lloyd, W.J. Ramsey, R.H. Rossetti, George Whitehead,
|
||
George Bedborough, J.T. Brighton, and J. Clayton. The list of
|
||
well-known Secularist debaters now embraced Foote, Charles Watts,
|
||
J.M. Robertson, W. Heaford, Cohen, Stanley Jones, and George
|
||
Whitehead. The better known of those who in this era opposed the
|
||
Secularists in debate included the Rev. S. Brennan, the Rev.
|
||
J.F.B. Finling, the Rev. F.W. Ford, the Rev. J.M. Logan, the Rev.
|
||
J. Moffatt, the Rev. C. Fleming Williams, the Rev. Daniel Macrae,
|
||
Dr. Alexander Jamieson, President of the Glasgow Protestant
|
||
Laymen's Association, the Rev. W.T. Lee, W.S. Clarke, of the
|
||
Christian Defense Association, the Rev. H.W. Dick, the Rev. A.J.
|
||
Waldron, the Rev. Arthur J. Dade, the Rev. B.J. Coles, Noah
|
||
Railey, of the Christian Evidence Society, the Rev. W. Hatch, the
|
||
Rev. R.H. Homer, G.R. Samsays, Editor of the Birmingham 'Weekly
|
||
Mercury,' Canon Storr, the Rev. W.H. Claxton, the Rev. D.
|
||
Richards, N. Barbanell, Vice-President of the Spiritualist
|
||
National Union, the Rev. D. Nixon, the Rev. J. Hogg, the Rev, D.
|
||
Richards, the Rev. J.H. Mowers, G.H. Hicks, General Secretary of
|
||
the New Church Evidence Society, and Capt. B. Acworth, of the
|
||
Evolution Protest Movement. ["National Reformer," 1890-1893,
|
||
passim; "Freethinker," 1890-1946.]
|
||
|
||
PROPAGATION OF SECULAR TEACHINGS
|
||
|
||
The Secularists of the Foote-Cohen period continued without
|
||
interruption the Secularist efforts of earlier eras to promote
|
||
the spread and application of Secular principles. A considerable
|
||
portion of their efforts was directed towards furthering the
|
||
acceptance of the broad doctrines making up the Secularist
|
||
ethical philosophy. Secularist lecturers endeavored to diffuse
|
||
among the masses of the people the conviction that the service of
|
||
man is man's moral duty; that such service can be achieved only
|
||
by natural means; and that it should be guided by the light of
|
||
secular knowledge. [See "Sunday Lecture Notice," "Sugar Plums,"
|
||
"Sunday Meetings" and "Mr. Foote's Engagement in "Freethinker,"
|
||
passim.]
|
||
|
||
Along with attempting to propagate the broad principles of
|
||
Secularism, the Secularists of the Foote-Cohen era gave attention
|
||
in their agitation to the less-basic portion of the Secular
|
||
program. It is true that one or two items in this section seem to
|
||
have been neglected. It is also true that certain Secularists,
|
||
later to be noticed, did not work in behalf of some of the
|
||
points. But with these exceptions, the Secularists labored
|
||
zealously in this sphere.
|
||
|
||
In the governmental sphere, they attempted, for one thing,
|
||
to secure the abolition of the monarchy and the establishment of
|
||
a republic. Secularist republican agitation, it is true, was
|
||
strictly limited in extent. Nevertheless, Foote and other
|
||
Secularists now and then lectured to this end. [Ibid.]
|
||
|
||
Scattered Secularist efforts were also made to secure the
|
||
abolition of the House of Lords. In 1894 the National Secular
|
||
Society became affiliated with the National League for the
|
||
Abolition of the House of Lords, while in the same year Foote and
|
||
a fellow Secularist, A.B. Moss, spoke at a great demonstration
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
91
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
which the League held in Hyde Park. Besides this, a Secularist
|
||
lecture was from time to time directed against the House of
|
||
Lords, and in 1910 the Annual Conference of the National Secular
|
||
Society carried a resolution to the effect that any reform of "a
|
||
Second Chamber" that might be undertaken should call for the
|
||
abolition of the hereditary principle, as well as for the
|
||
abandonment of the practice of granting membership to bishops and
|
||
archbishops of the Church of England on the strength of their
|
||
ecclesiastical positions. ["National Secular Society,"
|
||
"Freethinker," February 22, 1894; "Sugar Plums," "Freethinker,"
|
||
August 26 and September 2, 1894; "Sunday Lecture Notices,"
|
||
"Freethinker," passim; "National Secular Society's Annual
|
||
Conference," "Freethinker," May 22, 1910.]
|
||
|
||
Universal suffrage, too, was demanded. Inasmuch as the
|
||
Reform Acts of 1867 and 1884 had brought about a situation in
|
||
which virtually all men enjoyed the right to vote, Secularist
|
||
interest in promoting the achievement of universal suffrage found
|
||
expression in the Foote-Cohen period only in connection with the
|
||
idea of votes for women; but in this sphere some action was in
|
||
evidence. There was passed, in 1913, by the Annual Conference of
|
||
the National Secular Society, a resolution in which the principle
|
||
of woman suffrage was endorsed. It will be observed that the
|
||
resolution was carried in the period preceding the close of the
|
||
First World War. Any agitation that might otherwise have been
|
||
undertaken after the war was rendered unnecessary by the
|
||
legislative enactments of 1918 and 1928, which granted suffrage
|
||
to women. ["National Secular Society's Annual Conference,"
|
||
"Freethinker," May 25, 1913; G.W. Foote, "Women and Freethought,"
|
||
"Freethinker," November 11, 1906; Joseph McCabe, "Life and
|
||
Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II. 296.]
|
||
|
||
The Secularists of the Foote-Cohen period endeavored in
|
||
various ways to improve the lot of the masses. One part of this
|
||
work was an attempt to provide wholesome recreation for
|
||
Secularists and their friends. Many social functions were
|
||
arranged for this purpose, and these took quite a variety of
|
||
forms, including teas, dances, concerts, dinners, dramatic
|
||
entertainments, picnics, and excursions. ["Freethinker,"
|
||
1890-1946, passim; "National Reformer," 1890-1893, passim;
|
||
"Branches of the National Secular Society," "Secular, Almanack
|
||
for 1894" (1893), pp. 39-43; F.J. Gould, "Life Story of a
|
||
Humanist" (1923), pp. 85 and 88-89.]
|
||
|
||
The Secularists likewise maintained a "Benevolent Fund"
|
||
which, derived from contributions and from the proceeds of
|
||
entertainments, was utilized to alleviate the suffering of
|
||
Secularists in distress, Though the sums on hand were always
|
||
small, deserving applicants were given some assistance.
|
||
["Benevolent Fund," "To Correspondents," "Sugar Plums," "National
|
||
Secular Society," and "Sunday Meetings," "Freethinker," passim;
|
||
"Ball's Pond Secular Sick and Tontine Society," "Secular Almanack
|
||
for 1894" (1893), p. 44; "Branches of the National Secular
|
||
Society," "Secular Almanack for 1901" (1900), 27-29.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
92
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
In the interest of mass welfare, too, Secularist action in
|
||
the Foote-Cohen era was undertaken to promote birth control. Much
|
||
of this took the form of arguments in favor of the practice. In
|
||
this connection the point was made, as in the two earlier Secular
|
||
periods, that contraception was a means of preventing poverty due
|
||
to overpopulation. In the early 90's J.M. Robertson wrote to this
|
||
effect for the National Reformer, while the Secularist George
|
||
Whitehead did so in a volume entitled 'Birth Control and Race
|
||
Culture,' which he published in 1925. The argument was also
|
||
advanced (and this was apparently a new approach for the
|
||
Secularists) that birth control was an avenue to better health.
|
||
This viewpoint appeared in a short-lived periodical, bearing the
|
||
title Birth Control, which the Secularist George Standring
|
||
published in 1919. Alongside of Secularist arguments in favor of
|
||
contraception, there appeared efforts by the Secularists to
|
||
identify governmental agencies with its promotion. These were
|
||
exemplified in a resolution passed by the Annual Conference of
|
||
the National Secular Society, in 1930, urging the establishment
|
||
of municipal birth-control clinics. [J.M. Robertson, "What Neo-
|
||
Malthusians Teach," "National Reformer," November 8, 1891; George
|
||
Whitehead, "Birth, Control and Race Culture" (1925); Norman E
|
||
Himes, Medical history of Contraception" (1936); "National
|
||
Secular Society, Report of the Annual Conference," "Freethinker,"
|
||
June 22, 1930; "Sunday Meetings," "Freethinker," passim;
|
||
"National Secular Society's Conference," "Freethinker," June 9,
|
||
1895.]
|
||
|
||
Paralleling these various forms of action were efforts which
|
||
the Secularists of the Foote-Cohen era exerted in connection with
|
||
education. The educational goal of the Secularists, as we have
|
||
seen, was a system of state schools providing Secular education
|
||
at public expense; and Secular educational labors were mainly
|
||
directed to this end. Some effort was spent, however, in the
|
||
operation, as a device for use pending the achievement of the
|
||
Secularist goal, of Secular schools in connection with Secularist
|
||
societies. The schools which the Secularists operated were open
|
||
on Sundays or in the evening of week days, and offered
|
||
instruction in both scientific and non-scientific subjects. The
|
||
number of Secularist schools dwindled as the period under
|
||
consideration advanced, and by the autumn of 1946 had become
|
||
inconsequential. ["Freethinker," 1890-1946, passim; "Guide to
|
||
the Lecture Room," "National Reformer," 1890-1893, passim;
|
||
"Branches of the National Secular Society," "Secular Almanack for
|
||
1894" (1893), pp. 39-43, and "Secular Almanack for 1901" (1900),
|
||
pp. 27-29; F.J. Gould, "life Story of a humanist" (1923), pp.
|
||
87-88.]
|
||
|
||
Secularist efforts in the interest of Secular education in
|
||
state schools took a variety of forms. Down to 1900, when local
|
||
school board elections were held for the last time, Secularist
|
||
and other school-board candidates pledged to advocate state
|
||
Secular schools were supported by Secularists, sometimes with
|
||
success. Secularist writings for the cause of a state system of
|
||
Secular schools made their appearance, notably in 1897 and 1902,
|
||
when manifestos were issued by the National Secular Society.
|
||
Demonstrations which supported Secular education by the state
|
||
were held by the National Secular Society (1902), or (1904 and
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
93
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
1906) by the National Secular Society in collaboration with other
|
||
advanced bodies, such as the Trades Union Parliamentary Committee
|
||
and the Social Democratic Federation. The Executive of the
|
||
National Secular Society gave financial support to the Secular
|
||
Education League, which was founded in 1907, and which shared the
|
||
Secularist aim of secular schools maintained and controlled by
|
||
the state, while Foote and Cohen served on the Executive
|
||
Committee of the League. Lectures in support of state secular
|
||
education were delivered by Foote, Charles Watts, Cohen and
|
||
various other Secularists. Numerous resolutions in favor of
|
||
Secular education at the hands of the state were passed by Annual
|
||
Conferences of the National Secular Society. Secularist parents
|
||
now and then withdrew their children from religious instruction
|
||
in the state schools. ["Freethinker," 1890-1946, passim; "Guide
|
||
to the Lecture Room," "National Reformer," 1891-1893; F.J. Gould,
|
||
"Life Story of a Humanist" (1923), p. 92; "Obituary,"
|
||
"Freethinker," October 14, 1917.
|
||
|
||
For several months the Secularists cooperated with the Moral
|
||
Instruction League, which was formed at the end of 1897 "to
|
||
substitute systematic non-theological moral instruction for the
|
||
present religious teaching in all State schools." The Executive
|
||
of the National Secular Society donated funds to the League and
|
||
four members of the Secularist Executive -- Foote, Charles Watts,
|
||
Cohen, and S. Hartman -- served in its Executive Committee.
|
||
Secularist cooperation with the league came to a close in 1899,
|
||
after the League had endorsed the use of the Bible in State
|
||
schools as an instrument of moral instruction. "Sugar Plums,"
|
||
"Freethinker," July 11, 1897, to February 6, 1898, passim; Edith
|
||
M. Vance, "National Secular Society," "Freethinker," January 1,
|
||
1899; "National Secular Society's Conference," "Freethinker," May
|
||
28, 1899.]
|
||
@@@@
|
||
A prominent phase of the activity undertaken by the
|
||
Secularists of the Foote-Cohen era in the interest of reform in
|
||
various departments of society was the campaign which they
|
||
carried on for the removal of the obstacles that stood in the way
|
||
of free intellectual expression. As a part of this work they
|
||
sought to build up attitudes hostile to all such obstacles by
|
||
pointing out the need for intellectual liberty in general.
|
||
Various resolutions expressing concern over indications of an
|
||
intolerant spirit which were in evidence and urging support for
|
||
intellectual freedom were passed by Annual Conferences of the
|
||
National Secular Society. [Edith M. Vance, "National Secular
|
||
Society," "Freethinker," December 6, 1914, and December 9, 1917;
|
||
"National Secular Society's Annual Conference," "Freethinker,"
|
||
1914-1946, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Besides advocating freedom of the mind in general, the
|
||
Secularists opposed the violation of the principle of
|
||
intellectual liberty in various restricted spheres. For one
|
||
thing, they resisted interference with the press. On a number of
|
||
occasions when the freedom of the press was encroached upon they
|
||
sprang into action. In 1891, after a barrister-at-law, H.S.
|
||
Young, had been prosecuted for sending a birth-control tract in a
|
||
sealed envelope through the Post Office, and had been condemned
|
||
to pay a fine and costs amounting to more than 50 pounds, Foote
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
94
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Cooperated with Dr. C.R. Drysdale, President of the Malthusian
|
||
League, in the formation of a Free Discussion Defense Committee
|
||
which held public meetings of protest against the prosecution.
|
||
["Free Discussion Defense Committee," "Freethinker," November 29,
|
||
1991; "Sugar Plums," "Freethinker," November 29, 1891, to June
|
||
12, 1892, passim; "National Secular Society's Conference,"
|
||
"Freethinker," June 12, 1892.] In 1892 the Newcastle
|
||
Secularists, together with a few Spiritualists, raised funds for
|
||
the defense of one H. Loader, who was prosecuted for selling a
|
||
medical work on the population question, and held meetings to
|
||
protest against the prosecution and the sentence of a month's
|
||
imprisonment which the defendant received. ["Sugar Plums,"
|
||
"Freethinker," January 10 to February 14, 1992, passim; "National
|
||
Secular Society's Conference," "National Reformer," June 12,
|
||
1892.] In 1898 Foote, Holyoake, Charles Watts, and J.M.
|
||
Robertson cooperated with Bernard Shaw, H.M. Hyndman, and other
|
||
non-Secularists in a Free Press Defense Committee formed in
|
||
protest against the prosecution of George Bedborough, Secretary
|
||
of the Legitimation League, for circulating various works
|
||
published under the auspices of the League -- though the work of
|
||
the Committee was frustrated when Bedborough, through an
|
||
arrangement with the prosecution, escaped the risk of
|
||
imprisonment by pleading guilty. [Freethinker," January 12,
|
||
1898, to May 28, 1899, passim.] And two or three times since the
|
||
opening of the war which began in 1939, the National Secular
|
||
Society, through its Executive or its Annual Conference, has
|
||
passed resolutions protesting against the action of the
|
||
Government in suppressing newspapers and other periodicals
|
||
without a clear statement of the offense committed and without an
|
||
opportunity being given the proprietors involved of defending
|
||
themselves before a court of law. ["Freethinker," 1941-1946,
|
||
passim.]
|
||
|
||
The Secularists also endeavored to put an end to violations
|
||
of the principle of the equality before the law of all forms of
|
||
opinion. They attempted, for one thing, to bring to a close the
|
||
privileges and advantages bestowed by the state upon religious
|
||
interests. Their work in this direction involved first of all
|
||
efforts to secure the disestablishment of the State Church -- at
|
||
first in all parts of Great Britain and later (after the Welsh
|
||
Disestablishment Bill became law in 1914) in England and
|
||
Scotland. Resolutions in favor of disestablishment were passed by
|
||
some three or four Annual Conferences of the National Secular
|
||
Society. ["National Secular Society's Conference" (or equivalent
|
||
title), "Freethinker," June 14, 1903, June 14, 1914, and June 19,
|
||
1927.]
|
||
|
||
But the Secularists worked also to terminate various other
|
||
benefits which the church forces enjoyed at the hands of the
|
||
state. At Secularist Annual Conferences they passed resolutions
|
||
condemning the exemption of places of worship from taxation, the
|
||
use of religious ceremonials in connection with governmental
|
||
functions, the employment of chaplains by the state, the
|
||
compelling of soldiers and sailors to attend religious services,
|
||
the exemption of the clergy from military service, and the
|
||
broadcasting of sermons and religious services by the quasi-
|
||
public British Broadcasting Corporation. ["National Secular
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
95
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Society's Annual Conference" (or equivalent title),
|
||
"Freethinker," 1915-1946; Edith M. Vance, "National Secular
|
||
Society," "Freethinker," November 11, 1917; "Sugar Plums"
|
||
"Freethinker," December 1, 1918, and May 12, 1929; Executive of
|
||
the National Secular Society, "General Information for
|
||
Freethinkers" (1921), pp. 6-7.
|
||
|
||
Resolutions less thoroughgoing than those referred to above
|
||
in connection with religious broadcasting were also passed by
|
||
Secularist Annual Conferences. From time to time the British
|
||
Broadcasting Corporation was condemned for not providing
|
||
alternate programs at those times when religious exercises were
|
||
presented. Apparently these milder resolutions were passed as
|
||
offering greater promise of early fulfillment than the others.
|
||
"National Secular Society's Annual Conference" (or equivalent
|
||
title), "Freethinker" May 25, 1930, Jane 7, 1921, and May 20,
|
||
1937.]
|
||
|
||
In the interest of an equal status in the eyes of the law
|
||
for all varieties of opinion, efforts were likewise made by the
|
||
Secularists of the Foote-Cohen era to secure the repeal of the
|
||
blasphemy laws. Lectures were delivered, and in 1922 Cohen
|
||
brought out a pamphlet entitled 'Blasphemy: A Plea for Religious
|
||
Equality.' Then, too, Parliamentary candidates and Members of
|
||
Parliament were repeatedly urged to work for the cause, and when
|
||
bills calling for the repeal of the blasphemy laws were
|
||
introduced into Parliament, Secularist support was invariably
|
||
given to them. Besides all this, in 1922 the Secularists took the
|
||
initiative in the formation of the Society for the Abolition of
|
||
the Blasphemy Laws; and, after the organization was launched,
|
||
cooperated with it year after year, Cohen and other Secularists
|
||
serving on its Executive Committee. ["National Reformer,"
|
||
1891-1893, passim; "Freethinker," 1890-1946, passim; Chapman
|
||
Cohen, "Blasphemy: A Plea for Religious Equality" (1932)]
|
||
|
||
A further part of the Secularist effort in the Foote-Cohen
|
||
era to secure for all opinions an equal footing before the law
|
||
took the form of an attempt to bring about legislation which
|
||
would insure the payment of legacies to Secularist and other
|
||
Freethought bodies. It will be recalled that preceding the
|
||
establishment in 1898 of the Secular Society, Limited, bequests
|
||
of Secular societies had been withheld from them by the courts,
|
||
when appealed to, on the ground that their use by the Secularists
|
||
would constitute a violation of the blasphemy laws. The
|
||
Secularist agitation for the repeal of the blasphemy laws had
|
||
been designed in part to remedy this situation, but after long
|
||
years of effort success in getting the blasphemy laws repealed
|
||
still seemed remote; and in 1890 the Annual Conference of the
|
||
National Secular Society decided that action was desirable
|
||
looking to legislation specifically authorizing the payment of
|
||
Freethought bequests.
|
||
|
||
The Conference requested Bradlaugh, who was then a Member of
|
||
Parliament, to do what he could for the cause. Bradlaugh did
|
||
nothing, for one reason or another, but the matter was
|
||
nevertheless pushed. Holyoake formed a Liberty of Bequest
|
||
Committee which persuaded a Member of Parliament for Northampton,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
96
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Mr. Manfield, to introduce a bill legalizing the payment of
|
||
Freethought bequests, and the National Secular Society gave the
|
||
measure its support. ["National Reformer," 1890-1893, passim;
|
||
"Sugar Plums," "Freethinker," September 28, 1890, and November
|
||
21, 1891; G.W. Foote, "Mr. Holyoake's Bill," "Freethinker,"
|
||
December 27, 1891; F.J. Gould, "Chats with Pioneers of Modern
|
||
Thought" (1898), p. 43; G.J. Holyoake, "Bygones Worth
|
||
Remembering" (1905), II, 199-204; Joseph McCabe, "Life and
|
||
Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), 11, 264-265 and 344.]
|
||
|
||
Secularist efforts to secure legislation which specifically
|
||
authorized the payment of bequests to Freethought bodies did not
|
||
long persist. The bill introduced by Manfield was blocked, and,
|
||
no further prospects of success appearing, the Liberty of Bequest
|
||
Committee before long vanished, while the National Secular
|
||
Society began once more to devote all its available energies to
|
||
the work of striving for the repeal of the blasphemy laws.
|
||
["National Secular Society's Conference," "Freethinker," May 20,
|
||
1894, and May 31, 1896; G.J. Holyoake, "Bygones Worth
|
||
Remembering" (1905), II, 199-204; Joseph McCabe, "Life and
|
||
Letters of George Jacob Holyoake" (1908), II, 264-265.]
|
||
|
||
We have seen in another connection that after the
|
||
establishment of the Secular Society, Limited, bequests intended
|
||
for Secularist use which were willed to the Secular Society,
|
||
Limited, regularly came into the possession of the Secularists,
|
||
and that an appeal to the courts to withhold such a bequest
|
||
resulted in failure (1917).
|
||
|
||
FIGHTING THE RELIGIOUS INTERESTS
|
||
|
||
Secularist efforts to advance the principles of Secularism
|
||
were only a part of the Secular activity in the Foote-Cohen era.
|
||
Energetic attempts were also made to undermine the strength and
|
||
influence of organized religion. Indeed, a, large portion of the
|
||
Secularist energies of the period went into this work; for not
|
||
only did the Secularists virtually all participate in it, but
|
||
some Secularists, fearing that the already diminished Secular
|
||
Movement would be further reduced by disagreements growing out of
|
||
a greatly diversified program, and arguing that practically all
|
||
Secularists could endorse anti-church agitation and intimately
|
||
connected endeavors, devoted all their energies to attacking the
|
||
churches and to the furtherance of those Secular teachings
|
||
(notably the doctrines of secular education and freedom of
|
||
thought) which were intimately bound up with the religious issue.
|
||
If the early Secularists devoted a proportionately large share of
|
||
their strength to the spread of the principles of Secularism at
|
||
the expense of anti-religious agitation, and the Secularists of
|
||
the Bradlaugh period expended relatively equal energies on the
|
||
propagation of the Secular principles and on campaigning against
|
||
the churches, the Secularists of the Foote-Cohen era devoted a
|
||
proportionately large share of their energies to anti-church (and
|
||
closely related) agitation. ["National Secular Society's
|
||
Conference" (or equivalent title), "National Reformer," May 27,
|
||
1888, and June 1, 1890; G.W. Foote, "Past, Present, and Future,"
|
||
"National Secular Society's Almanack for 1894" (1893), pp. 15-16;
|
||
F.J. Gould, "Chats with Pioneers of Modern Thought" (1898), p.
|
||
43; "Freethinker," 1890-1946, passim.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
97
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Both Foote and Cohen sometimes wrote in favor of the
|
||
restriction of Secularist agitation to Freethought and closely
|
||
related matters, but neither thus consistently restricted his own
|
||
propagandist efforts. "Freethinker," 1890 and afterwards,
|
||
passim.]
|
||
|
||
In their anti-church campaign the Secularists of the Foote-
|
||
Cohen era attempted to discredit alike the teachings of
|
||
Christianity and the role of the Church in history. The arguments
|
||
which they used in the main resembled the Secularist arguments of
|
||
earlier epochs, and like them were based largely upon modern
|
||
thought and knowledge. They made their appearance in articles and
|
||
pamphlets and in lectures.
|
||
|
||
There was produced a sizeable collection of articles and
|
||
pamphlets. Foote brought out such hard-hitting publications as
|
||
'Is the Bible Inspired?' (1890) and 'The Book of God in the Light
|
||
of the Higher Criticism' (1897?). J.M. Wheeler published
|
||
'Paganism in Christian Festivals' (1895). The Secularist ex-
|
||
clergyman, J.T. Lloyd, came along with 'Prayer: Its Origin,
|
||
History, and Futility' (1916), and 'God-eating: A Study of
|
||
Christianity and Cannibalism' (1921). George Whitehead issued,
|
||
among other publications, 'Sex and Religion' (1930). Various
|
||
other Secularists also contributed pamphlets and articles, and
|
||
Cohen year after year put out forceful publications, typical
|
||
among which were 'Christianity and Social Ethics' (1910)), 'Women
|
||
and Christianity: the Subjection and Exploitation of a Sex'
|
||
(1919), and 'A Grammar of Freethought' (1921). [Numerous anti-
|
||
Christian pamphlets and articles of the period are listed in the
|
||
bibliography.]
|
||
|
||
Lectures against the churches were delivered in great
|
||
numbers. In the course of the period Foote, J.M. Robertson,
|
||
George Standring, Charles Watts, Cohen, Touzeau Parris, Stanley
|
||
Jones, Sam Standring, W. Heaford, A.B. Moss, W.J. Ramsey, Robert
|
||
Forder, H. Snell, H. Percy Ward, and many other Secularists
|
||
participated in this work. Representative of the titles of the
|
||
Secularist anti-church lectures are the following: "Pagan Origin
|
||
of Christianity," "Miracles of the Bible: Are They true?"
|
||
"Christianity and Civilization," "Credibility of the Gospels,"
|
||
"The Teachings of Jesus Opposed to True Morals," "Christian
|
||
Opposition to Science," "The Evolution of the Devil," "God's
|
||
Favorites," "The Bible Not Inspired," "God and Morality,"
|
||
"Buddha, Confucius, and Christ," "The Dishonesty of the Church,"
|
||
"Christianity the Enemy of Progress," "The Drawback of Theism,"
|
||
"Does God Answer Prayer?" "The Decay of Christianity,"
|
||
"Christism's Oppression of Women," "The Bible Fetish,"
|
||
"Christianity the Enemy of Medical Science," "The Christian God
|
||
an Impossibility," "Self-reliance versus Trust in God,"
|
||
"Freethought Martyrs," "The Trinity Puzzle," and "Religion the
|
||
Enemy of Man." ["Guide to the Lecture Room," "National
|
||
Reformer," 1890-1893, passim; "Sunday Meetings," "Mr. Foot's
|
||
Engagement" "Sunday Lecture Notices," and "Sugar Plums,"
|
||
"Freethinker," 1890-1946, passim.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
98
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST SECULARISM
|
||
|
||
Opposition to Secularism was in evidence among supporters of
|
||
Christianity in the Foote-Cohen era. This took the form partly of
|
||
a number of legal actions against minor Secularist agitators on
|
||
the ground of violation of the blasphemy laws. In 1911, 1913, and
|
||
1914 prison sentences totaling 10 months were meted out to Thomas
|
||
William Stuart for uttering "blasphemous" remarks while
|
||
lecturing. In 1912 Stephen Edward Bullock was sentenced to three
|
||
months' imprisonment for using "blasphemous" language at a
|
||
meeting. In 1911, 1917, and 1921 prison sentences aggregating 23
|
||
months and two weeks were imposed on J.W. Gott for publishing
|
||
"blasphemous" matter in pamphlet form. [Hypatia Bradlaugh
|
||
Bonner, "Penalties Upon Opinions" (2d ed., 1913), pp. 106-109;
|
||
"Freethinker," 1911-1921, passim.]
|
||
|
||
Anti-Secularist activity also found expression in rough and
|
||
noisy forms. Sometimes hooting, groaning, and jeering were
|
||
directed at Secular speakers. Various Secularist lecturers were
|
||
jostled off their platforms, and some were pelted with stones or
|
||
clods or rotten oranges. Now and then after a Secularist meeting
|
||
a howling crowd would follow the speaker to his bus or lodging.
|
||
["Sugar Plums," "Freethinker," 1890-1946, passim; "Bethnal Green
|
||
Branch of the National Secular Society," "National Reformer,"
|
||
September 27, 1891; "National Secular Society's Conference,"
|
||
"Freethinker," June 6, 1909; Chapman Cohen, Almost in
|
||
Autobiography" (1940), pp. 72-78.]
|
||
|
||
Light is thrown on a typical example of this sort of
|
||
opposition by the following account of what took place on
|
||
November 30, 1893, in connection with a lecture which Foote
|
||
attempted at Ryhope:
|
||
|
||
"When Mr. Foote entered the hall he was cheered by a part of
|
||
the audience, and hooted and groaned at by another part. Mr.
|
||
Weightman, of Sunderland, took the chair, and appealed for fair
|
||
play, but he might as well have expostulated with a hurricane.
|
||
The meeting was a perfect pandemonium. Mr. Foote ... for the best
|
||
part of an hour ... held his ground, speaking all the time and
|
||
getting a minute's hearing whenever possible.... Some discussion
|
||
followed the lecture, and every time Mr. Foote rose to reply the
|
||
disorder was renewed. Finally some wretch turned the gas (lights)
|
||
off, and threw the hall into darkness. It required some
|
||
discretion, and a free use of matches, for the lecturer and his
|
||
friends to get out of the building. Some of the bigots followed
|
||
him to the miner's cottage he went to for a few minutes before
|
||
walking to the station. Here they made diabolical noises, mingled
|
||
with cries of 'Pull him out.' But they did not seem to like the
|
||
idea of beginning that business, and eventually Mr. Foote walked
|
||
safely to the station with the little band of Sunderland friends
|
||
and two or three members of the new Ryhope Branch. ["Sugar
|
||
Plums," "Freethinker," December 10, 1893.]
|
||
|
||
Finally, there were occasional efforts to strike at
|
||
Secularism in debates, or through replies to Secularist lectures,
|
||
or by withholding halls from the Secularists. ["Freethinker"'
|
||
1890-1946, passim.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
99
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Opposition to Secularism in the Foote-Cohen era was less
|
||
pronounced than it had been in the two earlier periods of
|
||
Secularist history. Even before the close of the Bradlaugh epoch
|
||
anti-Secularist activity began to be noticeably less in evidence,
|
||
and as the Foote-Cohen period advanced it became so reduced that
|
||
it was no longer a major source of disturbance to the
|
||
Secularists. ["National Reformer," 1860-1893, passim;
|
||
"Reasoner," 1852-1861, passim; "Freethinker," 1881-1946, passim.]
|
||
|
||
In considerable part all this was due to a growth of the
|
||
spirit of religious tolerance in the period of the waning
|
||
opposition, and to the fact that the decline of the Secular
|
||
Movement which took place during these years caused it to be less
|
||
feared as a disturber of vested interests and cherished beliefs.
|
||
A factor of greater importance, however, was the progress of
|
||
Secularism. Not only did the Secular principle of the promotion
|
||
of human welfare upon earth become increasingly prominent among
|
||
Christians of the period, but many of the various lesser features
|
||
of the Secular program came to be more generally embraced by
|
||
them; and these developments naturally helped a great deal to
|
||
undermine the opposition to Secularism.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER V
|
||
|
||
SIGNIFICANCE
|
||
|
||
The British Secular movement was by no means out of harmony
|
||
with a significant section of British aspiration and sentiment.
|
||
As a matter of fact, the desires and aims of the Secularists
|
||
were, in their essentials, held in high esteem by many other
|
||
Britishers. If the Secularists desired to see advanced the
|
||
principle that the service of man by natural and enlightened
|
||
means constitutes the sum total of man's duty, others shared the
|
||
same desire. If the Secularists endeavored to achieve democracy,
|
||
they were not alone in their effort. If better conditions for the
|
||
masses were a Secularist object, so were they sought by many non-
|
||
Secularists. If the Secularists desired a state-controlled system
|
||
of schools affording Secular education, others shared their
|
||
desire. If greater intellectual freedom was a Secular tenet, so
|
||
was it an item of belief for many others. And if the Secularists
|
||
wished to discredit a reactionary church, others did, too.
|
||
|
||
Despite the essential harmony between the Secularist
|
||
aspirations and a great deal of British sentiment, the
|
||
proportions of the organized Secularist undertaking were never
|
||
really large. Even in the best years of the Movement the number
|
||
of its affiliates reached only a few thousand and the centers of
|
||
action associated with it did not greatly exceed 100; and
|
||
throughout most of the period of its existence the dimensions of
|
||
which it could boast were considerably smaller.
|
||
|
||
The main reasons why the Secular Movement never became
|
||
anything more than a comparatively small one appear to be the
|
||
following:
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
100
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
1st. The Secularists scattered their efforts over too many
|
||
fields of endeavor. People generally preferred to identify
|
||
themselves with exclusively political, social, or intellectual
|
||
reform movements -- with specialized organizations, each of which
|
||
was devoted exclusively to the destruction of one of the many
|
||
evils fought by the Secularists. They felt that by so doing they
|
||
stood a better chance of success. The truth of this assertion is
|
||
suggested by the fact that numerous Secularists sooner or later
|
||
drifted away from the Secular Movement and became associated with
|
||
such undertakings, and by the no less eloquent fact that
|
||
proposals emanating from the Secularist body were in evidence
|
||
calling for the conversion of the Secular Movement into a
|
||
specialized endeavor -- ordinarily into a solely Freethought
|
||
enterprise -- on the ground that such a reconstruction would be
|
||
conducive to greater effectiveness.
|
||
|
||
2nd. The approach of the Secularists to the problem of
|
||
bettering the economic and social lot of the working classes was
|
||
too restricted. It is true, of course, that the Secularists
|
||
worked hard to improve the condition of the workers, as is shown
|
||
by their birth-control agitation, their land-reform activities,
|
||
their benevolent fund, and their furtherance of popular
|
||
recreation. But they tended to rely either on self-help devices
|
||
of one sort or another or on the removal of governmental
|
||
obstructions to self-help, and to show little appreciation of the
|
||
possibilities of social reform by means of positive state action.
|
||
It is no doubt true that in preaching the gospel of the
|
||
betterment of the masses the Secularists really helped promote
|
||
state-directed reform. It is also true that some Secularists
|
||
advocated this type of remedy. But the Secularist body as such
|
||
did not include this variety of social reform in its official
|
||
program. The period since the advent of the Secular Movement,
|
||
however, has been one which has aimed at social reform by
|
||
collectivist as well as individualist means. In fact, the demand
|
||
for positive social legislation has in recent decades been much
|
||
in the foreground. And persons who, though sharing the Secularist
|
||
zeal for social reform, were enamored of the collectivist variety
|
||
of reform, or who felt that both types were needed, refrained in
|
||
many cases from affiliating themselves with the Secularist body.
|
||
|
||
3rd. Secularists were apt to suffer petty persecution.
|
||
Intolerant Christians sometimes discriminated against them,
|
||
abused them in one way or another, or even ostracized them. It is
|
||
true that such unpleasant treatment sometimes strengthened the
|
||
Secular Movement, but such was not usually the case; for if there
|
||
were persons who accepted it as a challenge, there were many more
|
||
who shrank from it. The following type of observation is a
|
||
recurring one in Secularist literature:
|
||
|
||
"We well know that, in various parts of England, also
|
||
in Scotland, there are large numbers who would openly join
|
||
the Secular body, but who, at present, hesitate and hold
|
||
back, because they have become cognizant of painful
|
||
instances in which the honest avowal of sentiment resulted
|
||
in loss of situation, or profit, or friends. ["Secularist
|
||
Propaganda." "National Reformer," January 4, 1862. See also
|
||
"Reasoner," November 17, 1852.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
101
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
4th. The atmosphere of the Secularist camp smacked too much
|
||
of religion. Though the Secularists spent a great deal of energy
|
||
attacking religion, in many ways they resembled a religious
|
||
group. They had not only a moral code, but one which was similar
|
||
to parts of the code associated with Christianity. They talked
|
||
theology, just as the religionists did, though, of course, for a
|
||
different purpose. They had their Sunday lectures, which were not
|
||
altogether unlike sermons. They utilized ceremonies reminiscent
|
||
of sacraments. They even sang hymns. Nor was this all. Joseph
|
||
Barker, Joseph Symes Joseph McCabe (who for one year was
|
||
Secretary for the Leicester Secular Society), and John T. Lloyd
|
||
were former clergymen. H. Percy Ward had studied for the
|
||
ministry. Annie Besant was the one-time wife of a clergyman. And
|
||
John Watts, Charles Watts, and Dr. Aveling were the sons of
|
||
clergymen. Thus, as a result of training or temperament, the
|
||
Secularist leaders were often not so far removed psychologically
|
||
from the clergy. But the resemblance of the Secular Movement to
|
||
an organized religion was hardly an asset to it. The period
|
||
covered by the Secular Movement has been one in which
|
||
indifference to religion has become increasingly evident; and
|
||
persons who had ceased to be interested in clergymen and church
|
||
services were not always attracted by their Secularist
|
||
counterparts.
|
||
|
||
But if the Secular Movement itself was always relatively
|
||
small, the influence which it exerted -- thanks to the talent and
|
||
industry of the Secularist leaders and to faithful support of the
|
||
leaders by the rank and file -- was by no means negligible.
|
||
|
||
The changes involved in the Secularist influence were not
|
||
due altogether to the Secularists, but were brought about partly
|
||
by the non-Secularists already mentioned as sharing the
|
||
Secularist aims. In view of this fact, we shall find it
|
||
convenient, in discussing the Secularist influence, to mention
|
||
the various achievements which were brought about through the
|
||
total effort of the Secularists and the other like-minded
|
||
reformers, and then to assess the importance which the Secularist
|
||
action had in their accomplishment.
|
||
|
||
Of the several developments which the Secularists helped to
|
||
bring about, one of the most conspicuous was the growth of the
|
||
idea that it is man's duty to promote human welfare on earth.
|
||
This idea became so widespread as to be almost universally
|
||
endorsed, and belief in it became so firmly established that its
|
||
truth was generally taken for granted. Action in accordance with
|
||
the principle, of course, was less general, and perhaps was
|
||
relatively rare. But the belief itself all but triumphed. It was
|
||
so firmly established that persons generally endeavored to
|
||
justify their actions by it, and so widely held that individuals
|
||
or groups with programs to advance ordinarily sought support for
|
||
them by identifying them with it.
|
||
|
||
Another development had to do with democracy. Great progress
|
||
was made in the achievement of democratic government. Not only
|
||
were voting privileges secured for the great masses of men and
|
||
women alike (through the Reform Acts of 1867, 1884, 1918, and
|
||
1928), but the powers of the undemocratic House of Lords were so
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
102
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
greatly reduced (in 1911 by the Parliament Act) that it was no
|
||
longer able permanently to obstruct legislation enacted by the
|
||
popularly-elected House of Commons.
|
||
|
||
The economic and social conditions surrounding the laboring
|
||
masses were definitely improved. Thanks at once to the widespread
|
||
adoption of the practice of limiting the size of families through
|
||
birth control and to much corrective legislation affecting
|
||
working conditions, hours of labor, and even wages, poverty and
|
||
hardship were somewhat reduced. Insecurity, too, was made less
|
||
general, through the enactment by Parliament of social-insurance
|
||
legislation relating to unemployment, accident, sickness, and
|
||
invalidity, as well as by means of voluntary associational
|
||
schemes. And recreational facilities were extended through the
|
||
provision on Sundays, during the summer months, of music in the
|
||
parks, and through the opening on Sunday of museums, libraries,
|
||
art galleries, and other recreational centers.
|
||
|
||
Educational progress, too, was achieved. As a result of the
|
||
Education Act of 1370, many state schools were set up alongside
|
||
of the insufficiently-numerous private schools; and in these
|
||
state schools a strictly Secular education was made available to
|
||
any child whose parent or guardian requested that religious
|
||
instruction be withheld from him.
|
||
|
||
Intellectual freedom was broadened. In 1853, 1855, and 1861
|
||
respectively, the restrictive taxes on paper, advertisements, and
|
||
newspapers were removed. The legislation demanding the provision
|
||
of security against blasphemous or seditious utterances in
|
||
newspapers was abolished (1869). Through the Evidence Further
|
||
Amendment Act (1869), the Evidence Amendment Act (1870), and the
|
||
Oaths Act (1888) the right of non-religious persons to affirm
|
||
under all conditions in lieu of taking an oath was gained. And,
|
||
thanks to more liberal judicial interpretation, the blasphemy
|
||
laws came to be applied in less-oppressive ways -- as is Shown at
|
||
once by the triumph of the tendency to restrict blasphemy to the
|
||
criticism of religion in unseemly fashion, and by the
|
||
discontinuance of the practice of denying bequests to Freethought
|
||
bodies on the ground that such bodies violated the blasphemy
|
||
laws.
|
||
|
||
Finally, various religious changes were brought about. The
|
||
church was both weakened and changed. Two important factors
|
||
weakened the church. In the first place, it was weakened by the
|
||
curtailment of its role in the political, educational, and social
|
||
spheres. The political authority of the church was reduced when
|
||
the Parliament Act, in curtailing the authority of the House of
|
||
Lords, restricted that of the ecclesiastical dignitaries who sat
|
||
in that body. The educational function of the church was
|
||
relatively lessened when the state undertook to supplement the
|
||
religious schools with schools of its own. And the social
|
||
functions of the church were proportionately reduced when
|
||
extensive action for the alleviation of poverty and distress
|
||
began to be taken by the state.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
103
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
The church was also weakened by the increase of religious
|
||
skepticism. An impressive number of persons, especially among
|
||
university professors, members of the learned professions,
|
||
writers, shopkeepers. and city workers, ceased at once to endorse
|
||
the major tenets associated with organized Christianity and to
|
||
retain confidence in its fruits. This unbelief weakened the
|
||
church, not only because skeptics tended to withdraw their
|
||
membership and support from the religious bodies, but because
|
||
(though many became indifferent) they sometimes waged campaigns
|
||
against religion.
|
||
|
||
The church was changed through the restatement of Christian
|
||
doctrines and through a modification of Christian action. As for
|
||
the restatement of doctrines, it is true that nothing was done
|
||
officially; but increasingly numerous individual church members
|
||
adopted a revised creed. They changed the traditional doctrines
|
||
in such a way as to enable them to stand the test of modern
|
||
thought and knowledge. What this amounted to, in broad terms, was
|
||
that they emerged with a creed which was essentially earth-
|
||
centered and humanitarian -- one which envisaged religion, not as
|
||
a device for securing happiness in a world to come, or as an
|
||
instrument for holding the lower orders in cheek, but as a means
|
||
of reducing the many evils suffered by the masses of mankind in
|
||
the present life, and, in general, of promoting human happiness
|
||
here in the world.
|
||
|
||
Christian action came to be concerned more extensively with
|
||
the reform of conditions adversely affecting the lower classes.
|
||
The churches did not become primarily centers of reform, but
|
||
became such to an increasing degree. The lead in this direction
|
||
was taken by individuals and groups rather than by the churches
|
||
as organized bodies, but official action by the churches directly
|
||
was not altogether lacking. All in all, considerable effort was
|
||
put forth. Chief attention was paid to the improvement of the
|
||
social and economic condition of the workers. The Guild of St.
|
||
Matthew, the Christian Social Union, the Church Socialist League,
|
||
and other organizations, as well as numerous individuals, were
|
||
devoted primarily to this work. But other types of reform had
|
||
their Christian supporters. Thus there were advocates of
|
||
democracy, of Secular education, and of unrestricted intellectual
|
||
freedom. Perhaps the entire situation with respect to the
|
||
enlargement of Christian action in the interest of popular reform
|
||
is roughly characterized by Donald O. Wagner's summarizing
|
||
statement (1930) concerning the expansion of social-reform
|
||
activity in the Church of England since 1854. "Seventy-five years
|
||
ago," says Mr. Wagner, "bishops would have now been thought the
|
||
last possible converts to social reform. Many of them are far in
|
||
advance of their flocks and a few are nothing less than
|
||
agitators." [Donald O. Wagner, "The Church of England and Social
|
||
Reform Since 1854" (1930), p. 326.]
|
||
|
||
Although the contributions which the Secularists made to
|
||
these several achievements cannot, of course, be measured with
|
||
any degree of precision, their size may be roughly approximated,
|
||
To the advancement of the idea that it is the duty of man to
|
||
promote man's well-being in this life they contributed much --
|
||
thanks to their prolonged and energetic campaign to that end.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
104
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
In the securing of the Parliamentary enactments involving
|
||
the furtherance of democracy, the Secularists played a part which
|
||
was important. They helped to augment the demand which brought
|
||
them about.
|
||
|
||
The Secularist contribution to the improvement of conditions
|
||
among the workers was significant. For one thing, they aided
|
||
perceptibly in the alleviation of poverty. Not only did they
|
||
render much help in preparing the ground for remedial measures
|
||
through bringing the problem of poverty before the public eye,
|
||
but by furthering the limitation of the size of families among
|
||
the working elements in the population, they helped a great deal
|
||
to reduce the unemployment arising from the presence of a greater
|
||
number of workers than the employing classes needed. They also
|
||
contributed noticeably to the promotion of greater security for
|
||
the workers, mainly through publicizing working-class insecurity,
|
||
and to some slight degree by means of the Secular Benevolent
|
||
Fund. Finally, they played a considerable part in the procuring
|
||
of Sunday music in the parks, and in the opening of libraries,
|
||
art galleries, and museums on Sunday.
|
||
|
||
The progress which was made in education owed a debt of
|
||
considerable proportions to the Secularists. The long years of
|
||
Secularist educational agitation helped much to ripen opinion for
|
||
the state-controlled schools which were set up, while the
|
||
operation of Secular schools by the Secularists and the
|
||
withdrawal of the children of Secularists from religious
|
||
instruction in the state-controlled schools furthered to some
|
||
slight degree the cause of secular education.
|
||
|
||
The efforts of the Secularists counted for a great deal in
|
||
the broadening of intellectual freedom. To the campaign which
|
||
secured the repeal of the taxes on paper, advertisements, and
|
||
newspapers they contributed much financial and other aid.
|
||
Secularist defiance of the Security Laws was a major factor in
|
||
the securing of their repeal. The fight for the extension of the
|
||
right of affirmation was in large part won by the Secularists, as
|
||
is indicated by the fact that the Evidence Further Amendment Act,
|
||
the Evidence Amendment Act, and the Oaths Act were all passed in
|
||
direct response to Secularist action. And Secularist action with
|
||
respect to the blasphemy laws was to some degree effective. By
|
||
persistently talking and writing against these oppressive
|
||
measures, by violating them on innumerable occasions, and by
|
||
making systematic efforts to prevent their enforcement, the
|
||
Secularists did much to further the tendency towards a less harsh
|
||
interpretation of them -- the tendency to conceive of them as
|
||
applying, not to all critics of Christianity, but only to those
|
||
who in their criticism departed from the standards of good taste.
|
||
|
||
The religious changes which were brought about were in
|
||
considerable part the result of Secularist labors. On the one
|
||
hand, the Secularists aided considerably the weakening of the
|
||
church. By helping to reduce the powers of the House of Lords
|
||
with its archbishops and bishop, by assisting in the
|
||
establishment of state schools at the expense of a completely
|
||
church-school system, and by furthering the improvement of the
|
||
condition of the lower classes by secular rather than by
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
105
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
religious means, they contributed significantly to the reduction
|
||
of the political, educational, and social role of the church. And
|
||
by carrying on a long and unbroken anti-religious campaign they
|
||
promoted to a large extent the growth of religious skepticism.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, the Secularists contributed a great deal
|
||
to the changing of organized Christianity. By exposing the
|
||
intellectual and social dereliction of the church, by luring away
|
||
many of its members, and by setting it an example of popular-
|
||
reform activity, they furthered extensively both the
|
||
modernization of Christian doctrine and the socialization of
|
||
Christian action. "We Christians," said the Rev. Stewart D.
|
||
Headlam, "owe much to the National Secular Society; it has helped
|
||
us to overthrow many idols and to sweep away much rubbish.
|
||
["Sugar Plums," "Freethinker," January 11, 1891.]
|
||
|
||
In a word, though the Secular Movement was not an especially
|
||
large one, it helped much to advance the causes of democracy,
|
||
social reform, education, secularism, mental freedom, and
|
||
socialized morality. It contributed appreciably to the creation
|
||
of some of the, most characteristic features of present-day
|
||
British society.
|
||
|
||
BIBLIOGRAPHY
|
||
|
||
Adams, W. E., Memoirs of a Social Atom. (1903);
|
||
|
||
Adams, W. E., The Slave-holder's War; an Argument for the Worth
|
||
and the Negro.
|
||
|
||
Adams, W. E., Tyrannicide; Is it Justifiable? (1858).
|
||
|
||
Agnostic (Anderson, George), An Agnostic's Progress from the
|
||
Known to the Unknown. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Anderson, George, A Reply to Cardinal Manning's Essay on the
|
||
relation of the will to thought. By Materialist. (1886).
|
||
|
||
"Anderson, George," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists, by Joseph McCabe (1920).
|
||
|
||
Annie Besant, D.L.: Queen's Hall Jubilee Demonstration, July 23,
|
||
1924. Report of Speeches (1924).
|
||
|
||
Annual Register for 1891.
|
||
|
||
Arnold, Matthew, Culture and Anarchy.
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Biological Discoveries and Problems. (1881).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Bookworm and other sketches. (1879).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Borderland between living and non-living
|
||
things, etc. (1883).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Botanical Tables for the use of students. (1874).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Comparative Physiology. (1876).
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
106
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Creed of an Atheist. (1881).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Curse of Capital. (1884).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Darwinism and Small Families. (1882).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Essays.
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., General Biology. (1882).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., God dies: Nature remains. (1881).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., A Godless Life the Happiest and Most Useful.
|
||
(1882).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Gospel of Evolution. (1884).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Irreligion of Science. (1881).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Is Life Worth Living? An Answer. (1879).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Natural Philosophy for London University
|
||
Matriculation. (1882).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., On Superstition. (188?).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., "The Pedigree of Man" and other Essays by Dr.
|
||
Ernst Haeckel, translated from the German, with the author's
|
||
consent, by E.B A... (1883).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Physiological Tables, for the use of students,
|
||
etc. (1877).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Religious Views of Charles Darwin. (1883).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Science and Religion. (1880?).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Science and Secularism. (1880).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Sermon on the Mount.
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Student's Darwin. (1881).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., The Value of this Earthly Life. A reply to "Is
|
||
Life Worth Living?" by W.H. Mallock. (1879).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Why I Dare Not Be a Christian. (1881).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., Wickedness of God. (1881).
|
||
|
||
Aveling E.B., and E.M. Aveling, The Factory Hell. (1885).
|
||
|
||
Aveling, E.B., and others, Christianity and Capitalism. (1884).
|
||
|
||
"Aveling, E.B.," Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists,
|
||
by Joseph McCabe. (1920).
|
||
|
||
Ball, William Platt, Mrs. Besant's Socialism, An Examination and
|
||
an Exposure. (1886).
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
107
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"Ball, (William Platt)," Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers,
|
||
by J.M. Wheeler. (1889).
|
||
|
||
"Ball, William Platt," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists, by Joseph McCabe. (1920).
|
||
|
||
Ballard, Frank, "Christian Theism Justified." London Quarterly
|
||
Review, January, 1921.
|
||
|
||
Barber, Thomas, Ought Charles Bradlaugh to be an M.P.? An
|
||
Expostulation addressed to the electorate of the borough of
|
||
Northampton... (1877).
|
||
|
||
Barker, Joseph, Barker's Review of Polities, Literature,
|
||
Religion, and Morals, and Journal of Education,, etc. Vol. 1-3.
|
||
(1861-1863).
|
||
|
||
Barker, Joseph, The Life of Joseph Barker written by himself, ed.
|
||
by his nephew J.T. Barker. (1880).
|
||
|
||
Barker, Joseph, Modern Skepticism: A Journey through the land of
|
||
doubt and back again. A life story ... (1874).
|
||
|
||
Barker, Joseph, Paine and His Calumniators. (186?).
|
||
|
||
Barker, Joseph, A Review of the "Elements of Social Science." (by
|
||
George Drysdale). (1863).
|
||
|
||
Barker, Joseph, The Theistic Controversy. (1860?).
|
||
|
||
Barker, Joseph, and Thomas Cooper, The Belief in a Personal God
|
||
and a Future Life; six nights' discussion between Thomas Cooper
|
||
and Joseph Barker, held in St. George's Hall, Bradford, Sept.
|
||
1860. (1860).
|
||
|
||
Barnes, Harry Elmer, The History of Western Civilization. (1835).
|
||
|
||
Bax, Ernest Belfort, Reminiscences and Reflections of a mid and
|
||
late Victorian. (1918)
|
||
|
||
Bedborough, George, Arms and the Clergy. (1934).
|
||
|
||
Benn, A.W., The History of English Rationalism in the 19th
|
||
century. 1906).
|
||
|
||
Benn, A.W., Modern England ... a record of opinion and action
|
||
from ... the French Revolution to the present day. (1908).
|
||
|
||
Bennett, De R.M., An Infidel Abroad; a series of letters written
|
||
while on a ten weeks' visit to Europe. (1880).
|
||
|
||
Bennett, De R.M., A Truthseeker Around the World. A series of
|
||
letters written while making a tour of the globe. (1881).
|
||
|
||
Bennett, De R.M., The World's Sages, Infidels and Thinkers.
|
||
(1876).
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
108
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Benny, James, Benny on Bradlaugh and Hyndman, etc.; a review and
|
||
criticism of the recent debate on "Socialism" between Bradlaugh
|
||
and
|
||
Hyndman. ... (1884).
|
||
|
||
Bernstein, Edward, My Years of Exile. (1921).
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Annie Besant; an autobiography. (1893).
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Auguste Comte: His Philosophy, His Religion, and
|
||
His Sociology. (1885).
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Autobiographical Sketches. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Beauties of the Prayer Book. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Biblical Biology. A Contribution to Religious Non-
|
||
Science. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Blasphemy. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Catholicism and Rationalism. A review of two
|
||
nights' discussion ... between Charles Watts and "A Catholic,"
|
||
with an essay on the relative merits of Secularism and
|
||
Catholicism by Annie Besant. (1875)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, "Charles Bradlaugh," Review of Reviews, March,
|
||
1891.
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, "Charles Bradlaugh," Review of Reviews, April,
|
||
1891
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Christian Creed; or, What It is Blasphemy to
|
||
Deny. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Christian Progress. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Circulation. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Civil and Religious Liberty. With some hints taken
|
||
from the French Revolution. A Lecture (188?)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Clericalism in France, By Prince Napoleon
|
||
Bonaparte (Jerome). Translated by Annie Besant.
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Coercion in Ireland and its Results. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Constructive Rationalism. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Disestablish the Church; or, Sins of the Church of
|
||
England. A series of pamphlets originally published separately in
|
||
1886 under the general title "The Sins of the Church." (1896)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Egypt, a Protest Against the War. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, England Before the Repeal of the Corn Laws. (1881)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
109
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, England, India, and Afghanistan, and the Story of
|
||
Afghanistan; or, Why the Tory government gags the Indian press. A
|
||
plea for the weak against strong., (1879)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, England's Jubilee Gift to Ireland. (1887)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The English Land System. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, English Marseillaise, with Music.
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, English Republicanism. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Essays by Mrs. Besant. (1875)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Essays on Socialism. (1887)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Ethics of Punishment. (1880)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Euthanasia. (1875)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Eyes and Ears, Six Chats on Seeing and Hearing
|
||
(1882)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Force No Remedy. An Analysis of the Coercion Act
|
||
(Ireland) (1882).
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, 1875 to 1891. A Fragment of Autobiography. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Free Trade v. 'Fair' Trade. Five Lectures
|
||
delivered in the Hall of Science during October, 1881 (1881)
|
||
|
||
besant, Annie, The Fruits of Christianity. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Giordano Bruno. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, God's views on marriage as Revealed in the Old
|
||
Testament. (1881?)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Gordon Judged out of his own Mouth. (1885).
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Gospel of Atheism: a Lecture. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Gospel of Christianity and the Gospel of
|
||
Freethought. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Henry Varley Exposed. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, History of the Anti-Corn-Law Struggle. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, History of the Great French Revolution. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, History of the Great French Revolution. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Idea of God in the Revolution, by Emile
|
||
Acollas. Translated by Annie Besant (1877)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Influence of heredity on free will, by Ludwig
|
||
Buchner. Translated by Annie Besant (1880).
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
110
|
||
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||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Is the Bible Indictable? ... Being an Enquiry
|
||
whether the Bible comes within the ruling of the Lord Chief
|
||
Justice as to obscene literature (1877)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Is Christianity a Success? (1885)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Jules Soury's "Jesus of the Gospels." Translated
|
||
by Annie Besant
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Jules Soury's "Religion of Israel." Translated by
|
||
Annie Besant (1881)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Law of Population. Its consequence and its
|
||
bearing upon human conduct and morals (1877)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Legalization of Female Slavery in England. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Liberty, Equality, Fraternity. (188?)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Life, Death, and Immortality. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Besaint, Annie, Light, Heat, and Sound. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Marriage; as it was, as it is, and as it should
|
||
be.
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Mind in Animals, by Professor Ludwig Buchner.
|
||
Translated... by Annie Besant (1880)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, My Path to Atheism. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Myth of the Resurrection. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Natural History of the Christian Devil. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Natural Religion versus Revealed Religion. (187?)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, On the Atonement. (1874)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, On the Deity of Jesus of Nazareth ... (1873)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, On Eternal Torture. (1874)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, On Inspiration. (1874)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, On the Mediation and Salvation of Ecclesiastical
|
||
Christianity. (1875)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, On the Nature and Existence of God. (1875)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, On the Religious Education of Children. (187?)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Physiology of Home. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Political Status of Women. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Religion of Israel, by J. Soury. Translated by
|
||
Annie Besant. (1880).
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
111
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, "Reply to Gladstone's 'True and False Conceptions
|
||
of the Atonement'", Nineteenth Century, June, 1895
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Roots of Christianity; or, The Christian Religion
|
||
before Christ (1886)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Rushing into War. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Secular Morality. National Secular Society's
|
||
Tracts -- No. 3
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Editor, The Secular Song and Hymn Book. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, (Selection?) from the fifteenth edition of Dr. L.
|
||
Buchner's "Force and Matter," translated by Annie Besant.
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Sin and Crime: Their Nature and Treatment. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Social and Political Essays. .
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Story of the Soudan. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Theological Essays and Debates
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Trades Union Movement. (1890)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The Transvaal.
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The True Basis of Morality. (1874)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Vivisection. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, What Is the Use of Prayer? (1884)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Why I Became a Theosophist. (1889)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Why I do not Believe in God. (1887)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Why Should Atheists be Persecuted? (1884).
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, Woman's Position According to the Bible. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, The World and its Gods. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, A World Without God. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, and C. Bradlaugh, Landlords, Tenant Farmers, and
|
||
Laborers. (1880).
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, and G.W. Foote, Is Socialism Sound? Verbatim
|
||
report of a four nights' debate between Annie Besant and G.W.
|
||
Foote ... (1887)
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, and A. Hatchard, The Besant-Hatchard Debate.
|
||
(1880)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
112
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Besant, Annie, and the Rev. G.F. Handel Rowe, Atheism and Its
|
||
Bearing on Morals. A Debate between Annie Besant and the Rev.
|
||
G.F. Handel Rowe ... (1887)
|
||
|
||
"Besant, Annie", Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers, by J.M.
|
||
Wheeler (1889)
|
||
|
||
"Besant, Annie", Chamber's Encyclopedia.
|
||
|
||
"Besant, Annie", Who's Who. (1932)
|
||
|
||
Besterman, Theodore, A Bibliography of Annie Besant. (1924)
|
||
|
||
Besterman, Theodore, Mrs. Annie Besant, A Modern Prophet (1934)
|
||
|
||
Bettany, F.G., Stewart Headlam. (1926)
|
||
|
||
Binyon, Rev. R.C., The Christian Socialist Movement in England.
|
||
(1931)
|
||
|
||
Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers of all Ages and Nations.
|
||
(1889)
|
||
|
||
Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
Biographical Sketch of Arthur B, Moss. (Reprinted, with
|
||
additions, from 'The Radical.')
|
||
|
||
Birch, William John, An Inquiry into the Philosophy and Religion
|
||
of the Bible. (1856)
|
||
|
||
Birch, William John, Paul an Idea, not a fact. (1855)
|
||
|
||
Birth Control, (1919)
|
||
|
||
Blackie, John Stewart, The Natural History of Atheism. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Blaikie, Rev. W.G., Christianity and Secularism compared in their
|
||
Influence and Effects. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Blavatsky, Helene Petrovna, The Thersites of Freethought. Being a
|
||
reply to certain attacks. (189-?)
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., Charles Bradlaugh: A Record of his Life and
|
||
Work by His Daughter Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner., With an account
|
||
of his Parliamentary Struggle, Polities, and Teachings by John M.
|
||
Robertson, M. P. (1894)
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., The Chemistry of the Home. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., Did Charles Bradlaugh Die an Atheist? (1909)
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., The Labour System of Assam.
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., Editor, Paine's Works
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., Penalties Upon Opinion; or, Some Records of
|
||
the Laws of Heresy and Blasphemy ... (1913)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
113
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., The Slave Struggle in America.
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., Stricken India.
|
||
|
||
Bonner, Mrs. H.B., "The Warpath of Opinion." A Reply (1902)
|
||
|
||
"Bonner, Mrs. H.B.", Who's Who. (1932)
|
||
|
||
Booth, Charles, Life and Labour of the People of London.
|
||
(1892-1897)
|
||
Bradlaugh, Alice, Mind Considered As A Bodily Function. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh Centenary Committee, Editors, Champion of Liberty:
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh (1933)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh and To-Day. Speeches delivered at the Centenary
|
||
Celebration ... 1933 (1933)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, American Cities.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Anthropology of Mr. Bradlaugh. A Page of His
|
||
Life (1873)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Atonement. (1860)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Autobiography of Mr. C. Bradlaugh. (1873)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Bible Not Reliable. (1858)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Bible; What it is: Being an examination
|
||
there-of from Genesis to Revelation (1857-1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Broadsides, Ballads, etc., Collection of,
|
||
issued in connection with Northampton election ... (1874)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Capital and Labour. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, A Cardinal's Broken Oath. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Channel Tunnel: ought the democracy to
|
||
oppose or support it? (1877)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Civil List and Grants to Royal Family.
|
||
(1882)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Compulsory Cultivation of Land: What it means
|
||
and why it ought to be enforced (1887)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Cromwell and Washington. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Does the Bible contain a Perfect Code of
|
||
Morality, (1860 or earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Doubts in Dialogue. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Eight Hours' Movement ... (1889)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
114
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Eight Hours' Question.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, England's Balance Sheet. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, A few Words about the Devil, and other
|
||
biographical sketches and essays (1864 or earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Five Dead Men Whom I Knew when Living; R.
|
||
Owen, J. Mazzini, C. Sumner, J.S. Mill, and Ledru Rollin (1877)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Genesis, its Authorship and Authenticity
|
||
(1882)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, George, Prince of Wales, with recent
|
||
contrasts and coincidences. (18??)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Has Man a Soul? (1859)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Heresy: its utility and morality. (1868)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Hints to emigrants to the United States of
|
||
America. (1879)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, How are We to Abolish the Lords? (1884)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Humanity's Gain from Unbelief, and other
|
||
selections from works of Charles Bradlaugh, with Prefatory note
|
||
by his daughter, H.B. Bonner (1929)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Impeachment of the House of Brunswick. (1872)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Indian Money Matters. (1889)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Inspiration of the Bible. (1873)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Irish Question. (1868)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Is there a God? (1860)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Jesus, Shelley, and Malthits. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough. (1884)
|
||
|
||
BradlaUgh, Charles, Labour and Law. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Labor's Prayer. (1865)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Land Question. (1870)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Land, the People, and the Coming Struggle
|
||
(1871)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Laws Relating to Blasphemy and heresy.
|
||
(1878)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, A Letter from a Freemason, to General H.R.H.
|
||
Albert Edward, Prince of Wales. (1867)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
115
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Letter to Dr. Brindley. (1860)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Life of Abraham.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Life of David.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Life of Jacob.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Life of Jonah.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Life of Moses.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, London Republican Club. The inaugural address
|
||
of the President, Mr. C. Bradlaugh. (1871)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Lying for the Glory of God: a Letter to the
|
||
Rev. Canon Fergie, D.D., Vicar of Ince, near Wigan. (1887)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Market Rights and Tolls Restrictive of Trade.
|
||
(1887)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, New Life of Abraham. (1860)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, New Life of David., (1860)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, New Life of Jacob. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, New Life of Jonah. (1861 or earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, New Life of Moses. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Northampton's Voice on the Royal Grants.
|
||
(1887)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Notes on Genesis. (1861 or earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Notes on Joshua, Judges, and Samuel. (1861 or
|
||
earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Parliament and the Poor.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Perpetual Pensions. (1880)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, A Plea for Atheism. (1864)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Political Essays. (Vol. I, 1864, Vol. II,
|
||
1865).
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Political Essays.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Poverty: its effects on the Political
|
||
condition of the people. (1863)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Prohibition of Free Speech. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Radical Program. (1885.)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Real Representation of the People. (1863)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
116
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Reform or Revolution. (1867)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, "The Republican Impeachment," Gentleman's
|
||
Magazine, January, 1873.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, A Review of the Work of the Rev. E. Mellor
|
||
... entitled "The Atonement, its relation to pardon," (1859)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Robert Cooper's "Holy Scriptures Analyzed,"
|
||
with Sketch of his Life.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Secularism: What is it? National Secular
|
||
Society's Tracts -- No. 7
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, "Socialism; its Fallacies and Dangers," North
|
||
American Review,, January, 1887.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Some objections to Socialism. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Speeches, by Charles Bradlaugh. (1890)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Supernatural and Rational Morality. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Taxation: how it originated, how it is spent,
|
||
and who bears it. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Theological Essays. (1889)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The True Story of My Parliamentary Struggle.
|
||
(1882)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Twelve Apostles. (1870)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, The Two Napoleons. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Were Adam and Eve our First Parents? (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, What Can Theism say for itself? (1880?)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, What did Jesus Teach? (1860 or earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, What Does the Bible Teach? (1860 or earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, What Does the Bible Teach about God? (1864 or
|
||
earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, What is Christianity? (1860 or earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, When Were Our Gospels Written? (1867)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Who was Jesus Christ? (1860)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, "Why Are We Secularists?" National Secular
|
||
Society's Tracts -- No. 8.
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Why Do Men Starve? (1865)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
117
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Workmen and their Wages. (1888)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. R.A. Armstrong, Is it Reasonable
|
||
to Worship God? Verbatim report of two nights' debate at
|
||
Nottingham between the Rev. R.A. Armstrong and Charles Bradlaugh
|
||
(1878)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Rev. W. Barker, Modern Atheism and the
|
||
Bible: Report of the Discussion between the Rev. W. Barker ...
|
||
and Iconoclast ... (1862)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Rev. Dr. Joseph Baylee, God, Man, and the
|
||
Bible. Three Nights' Discussion between the Rev. Joseph Baylee
|
||
... and Charles Bradlaugh ... June, 1860 ... (191-)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Ernest Belfort Bax, Will Socialism
|
||
Benefit the English People? A Written debate between E. Belfort
|
||
Rax and Charles Bradlaugh (1887)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Annie Besant, and Charles Watts, The
|
||
Freethinkers' Textbook,, (1876-1877)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Annie Besant, In the High Court of
|
||
Justice: Queen's Bench Division, June 18, 1877. The Queen v.
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh and Annie Besant. A verbatim report of the
|
||
trial of Bradlaugh and Besant for publishing the Knowlton
|
||
Pamphlet (1878)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Annie Besant, Socialism; for and against:
|
||
written debate with Mrs. Besant (1887)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, C. and Dr. Brindley, Discussion Between 'Iconoclast'
|
||
and Dr. Brindley. (1860 or earlier)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and W.R. Brown, Can Miracles be proved
|
||
possible? Verbatim report of the two nights' public debate
|
||
between ... Bradlaugh and W.R. Brown, etc. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Anthony Collins (W.H. Johnson), and John
|
||
Watts, Biographies of ancient and modern celebrated Freethinkers.
|
||
Reprinted from an English work, entitled "Half Hours with the
|
||
Freethinkers" (1877)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, Anthony Collins (W. H. Johnson), and John
|
||
Watts, Half-hours with Freethinkers. (October, 1856-1857)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Thomas Cooper, Two Nights' public
|
||
discussion ... on the being of a God as the maker and moral
|
||
governor of the universe ... 1864. (1874)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Rev. Marsden Gibson, Has Humanity Gained
|
||
from Unbelief? Two nights' debate between the Rev. Marsden Gibson
|
||
... and Charles Bradlaugh (1889)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and W. Gillespie, Atheism Or Theism? Debate
|
||
between Iconoclast ... and W. Gillespie (1869-72)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
118
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, C. and Brewin Grant, A full Report of the Discussion
|
||
between B.G. and 'Iconoclast' ... (1858)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. Brewin Grant, Discussion on
|
||
Atheism. Report of a public discussion between the Rev. Brewin
|
||
Grant ... and C. Bradlaugh ... 1875 ... (1875)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, C., and A.J. Harrison, Secularism. Report of a public
|
||
discussion between the Rev. Alexander J. Harrison ... and Mr.
|
||
Charles Bradlaugh ... 1870 (1870)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. A.J. Harrison, What does
|
||
Christian Theism Teach? Verbatim report of the two nights'
|
||
discussion between the Rev. A.J. Harrison and C. Bradlaugh ...
|
||
1872 (1909)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and G.J. Holyoake, Secularism, Skepticism,
|
||
and Atheism. Verbatim report of the proceedings of a two nights'
|
||
public debate between ... G.J. Holyoake and C. B. etc. (1870)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and W. Hutchins, Christianity and Secularism;
|
||
Report of a Public Discussion Between Mr. W. Hutchins and Mr. C.
|
||
Bradlaugh ... 1861 ... (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and H.M. Hyndman, Eight Hours Movement.
|
||
Verbatim report of a debate between H.M. Hyndman and C. Bradlaugh
|
||
(1890)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and H.M. Hyndman, Will Socialism Benefit the
|
||
English People? Verbatim report of a debate between H.M. Hyndman
|
||
and C. Bradlaugh ... 1884 (1884)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and David King, Christianity v. Secularism.
|
||
Report of a ... discussion between D. King ... and C. B....
|
||
Subject: "What can Secularism do for Man that Christianity
|
||
cannot?" (1870)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and La Bauchere, Northampton's Voice on the
|
||
Royal Grants. Preface by C. Bradlaugh ... (188?)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. T. Lawson, A discussion on the
|
||
Question, Has Man a Soul? between the Rev. T. Lawson ... and
|
||
Iconoclast ... (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. John Lightfoot, Eternal Torment.
|
||
A Written debate between the Rev. John Lightfoot ... and Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh ... 1876, (1888)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. James M. McCann, Secularism:
|
||
Unphilosophical, immoral, and anti-social. Verbatim report of a
|
||
three nights' debate between the Rev. Dr. Cann (sic) and Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh ... 1881. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Dr. W.C. Magee, Bishop of Peterborough,
|
||
Christianity in Relation to Freethought, Skepticism, and Faith.
|
||
Three Discourses by the Bishop of Peterborough, with special
|
||
replies by Charles Bradlaugh (1892)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
119
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Mr. Mackie, A Full Report of the
|
||
Discussion between Mr. Mackie ... and Iconoclast (Mr. Bradlaugh)
|
||
... 1861, on the question, What does the Bible teach about God?
|
||
(1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. T.D. Matthias, The Credibility
|
||
and Morality of the Four Gospels -- a debate ... (1859)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Sir Stafford Northcote, Northampton and
|
||
the House of Commons. Correspondence between C. Bradlaugh and Sir
|
||
Stafford Northcote, (1884)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Robert Roberts, Is the Bible Divine? A
|
||
six nights' discussion between Mr. Charles Bradlaugh and Mr.
|
||
Robert Roberts ... Together with a review of the discussion by
|
||
Mr. Roberts (1876)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and A. Robertson, The Existence of God.
|
||
Verbatim report of ... debate between Messrs, A. Robertson and
|
||
C.B. etc. (1870)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. J.H. Rutherford, Are the
|
||
Doctrines and precepts of Christianity, as taught in the New
|
||
Testament calculated to benefit humanity? Report of the debate
|
||
... between "Iconoclast" and J.H. Rutherford (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and W. Simpson, Disestablishment and
|
||
Disendowment of the English Church. ... Report ... of the debate
|
||
between ... C. Bradlaugh and W. Simvson, etc. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and John Watts, Half-hours with Freethinkers.
|
||
(1864)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and W.M. Westerby, Has, or is, Man a Soul?
|
||
Debate between Rev. W.M. Westerby and Charles Bradlaugh (1909)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and the Rev. Woodville. Woodman, The
|
||
Existence of God: A Discussion between Rev. Woodville Woodman,
|
||
and "Iconoclast" 1861 (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles, and Woodville Woodman, Is the Bible a Divine
|
||
Revelation? A Discussion between Rev. W. Woodman and Iconoclast
|
||
... 1861 (1861)
|
||
|
||
Bradlaugh, Charles. and Others. Notes on Christian Evidences;
|
||
being criticisms on "The Oxford House Papers" With replies by the
|
||
authors of the Papers (1909)
|
||
|
||
"Bradlaugh, (Charles)," Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers,
|
||
by J. M. Wheeler (1889)
|
||
|
||
"Bradlaugh, Charles." Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists, by Joseph McCabe (1920)
|
||
|
||
"Bradlaugh, Charles," Dictionary of National Biography. (1901)
|
||
|
||
"Bradlaugh, Charles," Chambers' Encyclopedia
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
120
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Bragdon. Claude Favette, A Brief Life of Annie Besant. (1909)
|
||
|
||
The Brighton Guardian. (1878-1880)
|
||
|
||
Buchanan, James, Faith in God and Modern Atheism. (1855)
|
||
|
||
Buchanan, James, Modern Atheism under its forms of Pantheism,
|
||
Materialism, secularism, development, and natural laws. (1859)
|
||
|
||
Butts. Asa K.. Sketch of the Life of Mrs. Besant. Prefatory to
|
||
American edition of her Marriage; as it was, as it is, and as it
|
||
should be (1979)
|
||
|
||
Cattell. C.C., Compiler, Agnosticism: an exposition and a
|
||
defense. Selected from leading authorities (19-)
|
||
|
||
Cattell. C.C., The Dark Side of Christianity.
|
||
|
||
Cattell, C.C., In Search of a Religion.
|
||
|
||
Cattell, C.C., Is Darwinism Atheistic? (1884)
|
||
|
||
Cattell. C.C., The Land: How to Make it Feed the People and Pay
|
||
the
|
||
Taxes. ... With Reply to Hon. John Bright, M.P. (1879?)
|
||
|
||
Cattell. C.C., The Man of the Past, the evidence of his natural
|
||
origin and great antiquity (1891)
|
||
|
||
Cattell. C. C., The Martyrs of Progress. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Cattell, C.C., Mr. John Bright and Labour Representation.
|
||
|
||
Cattell, C.C., Radicalism and Imperialism.
|
||
|
||
Cattell, C. C., Ralph Waldo Emerson,
|
||
|
||
Cattell, C. C., Secularism, Its Principles Stated.
|
||
|
||
Cattell. C. C., A Secularist's Principles. (1864)
|
||
|
||
Cattell, C.C., Secularism: What is it?
|
||
|
||
Cattell, C.C., The Solution of the Irish Land Question. What the
|
||
government must do. Inscribed to the Right Hon. W.E. Gladstone
|
||
(188-?)
|
||
|
||
Cattell. C.C., What is a Freethinker with a special reference to
|
||
Mr. R.D. Dale, M.A.
|
||
|
||
"Cattell, C.C.," Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists,
|
||
by
|
||
Joseph McCabe (1920)
|
||
|
||
Centenary Committee, Editors, Champion of Liberty: Charles
|
||
Bradlaugh (1933)
|
||
|
||
Cheyney, E.P., Modern English Reform (1930)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
121
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Chew. S.J., Mr. G.J. Holyoake refuted in his own words. (1852)
|
||
|
||
Churchill. Winston Spencer. Lord Randolph Churchill. (1906)
|
||
|
||
Clark, J., The Spurious ethics of the skeptical philosophy; a
|
||
critique of Mr. Holyoake's "Logic of Life" (1860)
|
||
|
||
Clepane, Miss Irene, Towards Sex Freedom. (1935)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Almost an Autobiography (1940)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, An Atheist's Approach to Christianity (1942)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Blasphemy; a plea for Religious Equality (1922)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Bradlaugh and Ingersoll. A centenary appreciation
|
||
of Two Great Reformers. (1933)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Christianity and Slavery. With a Chapter on
|
||
Christianity and the Labour Movement. (1918)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Christianity and Social Ethics. (1910)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Christianity and Woman. (1937)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, The Church's Fight for the Child (1938)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Creed and Character, The Influence of Religion on
|
||
social life (1919)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Deity and Design. (1912)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Determinism or Free Will. (1912)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, The Devil (1937)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Did Jesus Christ Exist? (1937)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Essays in Freethinking. (1923-27)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Evolution and Christianity. (1897)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Fascism and Christianity (1938)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Foreign Missions: their dangers and delusions
|
||
(1901)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Foundations of Religion
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Four Lectures on Freethought and Life
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Freethought and the Child (1939)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Giving 'em Hell (1938)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, God and Evolution (1925)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
122
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, God and Man. An Essay in common sense and natural
|
||
morality (1918)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Gods and Their Makers. (1937)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, God and the Universe. Eddington, Jeans, Huxley,
|
||
and Einstein. ... with a reply by Professor A.S. Eddington (1931)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, A Grammar of Freethought. (1921)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Humanity and War (1939)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Letters to a Country Vicar. (1934)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Letters to the Lord. (1935)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, The Massacre of the innocents. National Secular
|
||
Society Leaflet No. 7 (1917)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Materialism Restated. (1927)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Morality Without God. (1937)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Must We Have a Religion? (1937)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Opinions. Random Reflections and wayside sayings
|
||
(1930)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, The Other Side of Death. A critical examination
|
||
of the belief in a future life, with a study of spiritualism
|
||
(1922)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, An Outline of Evolutionary Ethics. (1896)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Pagan Survivals in Modern Thought
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Pain and Providence. (189?)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Pioneer Leaflets. No. 1 to 6 (1900?)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Primitive Survivals in Modern Thought. (1935)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Religion and the Child. (1916)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Religion and Sex; studies in the pathology of
|
||
religious development (1919)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, The Salvation Army and its Work. (1906)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Selected Heresies from the writings of Chapman
|
||
Cohen. (1931)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Socialism, Atheism, and Christianity. (1908)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Socialism and the Churches. (1919)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Spain and the Church. (1936)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
123
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Theism or Atheism; the great alternative (1921)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Thou Shalt Not Suffer a Witch to Live (1939)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, War -- civilization and the churches (1930)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, What is Freethought? (1937)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, What is the Use of a Future Life? (1938)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, What is the use of Prayer? (1897)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, Woman and Christianity. The subjection and
|
||
exploitation of a sex (1919)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, and C.E.M. Joad, Materialism: has it been
|
||
exploded? verbatim report of (a) debate between Chapman Cohen and
|
||
C.E.M. Joad ... 1928 ... revised by both disputants (1928)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, and Horace Leaf, Does Man Survive Death? Is the
|
||
Belief Reasonable? A debate between Mr. Horace Leaf and Mr.
|
||
Chapman Cohen ... 1920 (1920)
|
||
|
||
Cohen, Chapman, and Hon. Edward Lyttleton, The Parson and the
|
||
Atheist, a friendly discussion on religion and life, between
|
||
(the) Rev. and Hon. Edward Lyttleton ... and Chapman Cohen (1919)
|
||
|
||
"Cohen, Chapman," Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists,
|
||
by Joseph McCabe (1920)
|
||
|
||
Cole G.D.H., Life of Robert Owen. (1930)
|
||
|
||
Coleridge, Ernest Hartley, Life and correspondence of John Duke
|
||
Lord Coleridge, lord chief justice of England. (1904)
|
||
|
||
Coleridge, Baron J.D., The Law of Blasphemous Libel. The summing
|
||
up in the case of Regina v. Foote and others, etc. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Collet, C.D., History of the Taxes on Knowledge. Their origin and
|
||
repeal. With an Introduction by George Jacob Holyoake (1899)
|
||
|
||
Collet, Sophia Dobson, The Almanack of Freedom. (1855)
|
||
|
||
Collet, Sophia Dobson, George Jacob Holyoake and Modern Atheism.
|
||
A biographical and critical essay (1855)
|
||
|
||
Conway, Moncure D., Autobiography. (1904)
|
||
|
||
Conway, M.D., Blasphemous libels. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Conway, M.D., The Oath and its ethics. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Conway, Moncure D., The Voysey Case, from an heretical viewpoint
|
||
(1871)
|
||
|
||
Cooper, Robert, Autobiography. (1874)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
124
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Cooper, Robert, The Bible and its Evidences. (1858)
|
||
|
||
Cooper, Robert, The Immortality of the Soul, religiously and
|
||
philosophically considered. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Cooper, Robert, A reply to Thomas Cooper's recent lectures on God
|
||
and a future State. (1856?)
|
||
|
||
"Cooper, (Robert), Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers, by
|
||
J.M. Wheeler (1889)
|
||
|
||
"Cooper, Robert," Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists,
|
||
by Joseph McCabe (1920)
|
||
|
||
Cooper, Thomas, Life of Thomas Cooper. Written by Himself (1882)
|
||
|
||
Cooper, Thomas, The Triumphs of Perseverance and Enterprise.
|
||
(1854)
|
||
|
||
The Councillor on Secular, cooperative and political questions.
|
||
(1861)
|
||
|
||
Courtney, Janet E., Freethinkers of the Nineteenth Century.
|
||
(1920)
|
||
|
||
Cowper, B.H., The Logic of Life and Death, etc. (In answer to a
|
||
tract by G.J. Holyoake "The Logic of Death," etc.) (1865)
|
||
|
||
Cumming, Dr., Moses right, Colenso wrong: being popular lectures
|
||
in reply to the first and second parts of "Bishop Colenso on the
|
||
Pentateuch" (1863)
|
||
|
||
Curzon, F., The Gift of Life ... A Letter addressed to Mr.
|
||
Holyoake in reply to the "Logic of Death" (1853)
|
||
|
||
Davidson, J. Morrison, Eminent English Liberals in and out of
|
||
Parliament. (1880)
|
||
|
||
Davies, Dr. Maurice, Heterodox London: or phases of freethought
|
||
in the metropolis (1874)
|
||
|
||
Dennis, Geoffrey, Coronation Commentary (1937)
|
||
|
||
Dhar, Vishnunarayana, Mr. Bradlaugh's Indian Reform Bill. (1890)
|
||
|
||
"Dr. Annie Besant, Crusader, is Dead" New York Times, Sept. 22,
|
||
1933. (1933)
|
||
|
||
Dodsworth, James, Letter to the Shareholders of the National
|
||
Reformer Company, giving an account of the way in which the
|
||
editor was reelected at the March meeting, by James Dodsworth,
|
||
Chairman of the Board of Directors (1862)
|
||
|
||
Douglas, John Sholte, 8th Marquis of Queensberry, The Religion of
|
||
Secularism and the Perfectibility of man (18??)
|
||
|
||
"Douglas, Sir John Sholte," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists, by Joseph McCabe (1920)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
125
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Drysdale, George R., The Elements of Social Science. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Duncan, David, Life and Letters of Herbert Spencer (1908)
|
||
|
||
Elgood, John Charles, Thoughts on Theism ... A response to the
|
||
interrogatory of the lecture delivered by Charles Bradlaugh ...
|
||
last year and entitled "What Can Theism Say for itself?" ...
|
||
(1880)
|
||
|
||
Elliott, Hugh, Editor, Letters (of John Stuart Mill) (1910)
|
||
|
||
The English Leader, A Journal for the discussion of stationary
|
||
questions. (1864 and 1866)
|
||
|
||
Farrar, Frederick William, The Bible, its meaning and Supremacy.
|
||
(1897)
|
||
|
||
Farrar, Reginald, The Life of Frederick William Farrar, Sometime
|
||
dean of Canterbury, by his son R. Farrar (1904)
|
||
|
||
Faulkner, H.U., Chartism and the Churches (1916)
|
||
|
||
The Fleet Street Advertiser (1854)
|
||
|
||
Flint, Robert, Anti-Theistic Theories. (1880)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Arrows of Freethought. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Atheism and Morality, (1880)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Atheism and Suicide. A reply to Alfred Tennyson
|
||
(1881)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Atheist Shoemaker and the Rev. Hugh Price
|
||
Hughes, or, A Study in Lying, with a full and complete exposure
|
||
(1890)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Bible and Beer. (1912)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Bible Devil. (189-?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Bible God, (1889)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Bible Heroes., (1882)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Bible Romances, (1882)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Blasphemy no crime, The whole question treated
|
||
historically,, legally, theologically, and morally with special
|
||
reference to the prosecution of the "Freethinker" (1882)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Book of God in the Light of Higher Criticism,
|
||
with Special reference to Dean Farrar's new apology (1897?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Christianity and Progress. A reply to the Rt. Hon.
|
||
W.E. Gladstone (1902)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
126
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Comic Sermons and other fantasias, (1892)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Creation Story. (1882?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Crucifixion. (188-?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Death's Test: or, Christian lies about dying
|
||
Infidels (1882)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Defence of Free Speech; being a three hours' address
|
||
to jury in the Court of Queen's Bench before Lord Coleridge on
|
||
April 24, 1883 (New Ed., 1889)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Dr. Torrey and the Bible, (1905)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Dr. Torrey and the Infidels. (1905)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Dropping the Devil, and other free Church
|
||
performances. (1902)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Few Who are Saved. (1910?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Flowers of Freethought. (1894),
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Futility of Prayer. (1879)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Gladstone's Irish Stew.. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The God the Christians Swear By. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., God in a Box. (189-?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., God save the King, and other Coronation Articles, by
|
||
an English Republican (1903)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., God, The Soul, and a Future State. (1875)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Gospel Ghosts, (189-?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W,, The Grand Old Book, a reply to the Rt. Hon. W.E.
|
||
Gladstone's "The Impregnable Rock of Holy Scripture" (1891)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Editor, The Hall of Science libel case. With a full
|
||
and true account of "The Leeds Orgies". Edited, with an
|
||
introduction, by G.W. Foote (1895)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Heroes and Martyrs of Freethought. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Impossible Creed; an open letter to the Bishop
|
||
of Peterborough (1890)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Infidel Deathbeds. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Ingersallism defended against Archdeacon Farrar.
|
||
(1892)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Editor, "An Essay on Suicide," by David Hume; with
|
||
an historical and critical introduction by G.W. Foote (1894)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
127
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Editor, A refutation of Deism in a dialogue by Percy
|
||
Bysshe Shelley. With an introduction by G.W. Foote (1890)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Is the Bible inspired? ... A criticism on "Lux
|
||
Mundi" (1890)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., John Morley as a Freethinker: a statement and a
|
||
criticism. With numerous extracts from Morley's writings (1893)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Jonah's Excursion to Nineveh. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Letters to the Clergy. (1890)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Letters to Jesus Christ. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., A Lie in Five Chapters? or, The Rev. Hugh Price
|
||
Hughes's "converted atheist" (1890)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W.,. The Mother of God. (1918)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Miscellaneous Essays. (1895)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Mrs. Besant's Theosophy. (1889)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., My Resurrection; a missing Chapter from the Gospel
|
||
of St. Matthew, discovered and published by G.W. Foote (1892)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The New Cagliostro; an open letter to Madame
|
||
Blavatsky (1889)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Noah's Flood: a Chapter of Biblical Romauce (187-?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Passing of Jesus: or, The Last adventures of the
|
||
first Messiah (1902)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Peculiar People: an open letter to Mr. Justice
|
||
Wills, on his sentencing Thomas George Senior to four months'
|
||
imprisonment with hard labour, for obeying the Bible (1899)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Philosophy of Secularism. (1879)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Editor, A philosophical inquiry concerning human
|
||
liberty, by Anthony Collins. Reprinted with preface and
|
||
annotations by G.W. Foote, and biographical introduction by J.M.
|
||
Wheeler. (1890)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Prisoner for Blasphemy. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Randolph Churchill: the Woodstock bantam (Second
|
||
edition, 1885)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Reminiscences of Charles Bradlaugh. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Resurrection. (188-)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., A Rising God. (188-?)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
128
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Rome or Atheism, the great alternative. (1892)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Royal Paupers, showing what royalty does for the
|
||
people ... (Third edition, 1888)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Salvation Syrup: or, Light on Darkest England. A
|
||
reply to 'General Booth. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Secularism and its Misrepresentation.
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Secularism Restated.
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Secularism and Theosophy: a rejoinder to Mrs.
|
||
Besant's pamphlet (1889)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Secularism, the True Philosophy of Life. An
|
||
exposition and a defence (1879)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Shadow of the Sword. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Sign of the Cross; a candid criticism of Mr,
|
||
Wilson Barrett's play (1896)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., A Virgin Mother. (1882?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., The Wandering Jews. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Was Jesus Insane? (1882)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., What is Agnosticism? With observations on Huxley,
|
||
Bradlaugh, and Ingersoll, and a reply to George Jacob Holyoake;
|
||
also a defence of atheism (1902)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., What was Christ? A Reply to John Stuart Mill. (i.e.,
|
||
to, "Nature, the Utility of Religion, and Theism") (1887)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Who Was the Father of Jesus? (1895)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Why be good without hope of heaven or fear of hell?
|
||
The: answer of freethought
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., Will Christ Save Us? (1892)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and W.P. Ball. Editors, Bible Atrocities. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and W.P. Ball, Editors, The Bible Handbook for
|
||
Freethinkers and Inquiring Christians (1888?)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and W.T. Lee, Theism or Atheism: which is the more
|
||
reasonable? A public debate between Mr. W.T. Lee ... and Mr. G.W.
|
||
Foote ... 1895 (1896)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and H.A. Long, Verbatim Report of the public
|
||
discussion upon 'The Origin of Man,' between ... G.W.F. and H.A.
|
||
Long ... (1877)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
129
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and Rev. D.G. McCann, Christianity or Secularism,
|
||
Which is true? Verbatim report of a public debate between the
|
||
Rev. Dr. James McCann and Mr. G.W. Foote ... (1886)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and G. Sexton, Christianity and Secularism. Verbatim
|
||
reports of two ... debates ... the second on Secularism, between
|
||
G.W.F. and G. Sexton. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and G. Sexton, Is Secularism the true Gospel for
|
||
Mankind? Verbatim report of a debate ... between G.W.F. and G.
|
||
Sexton (1878)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and Bernard Shaw, The Legal Eight Hours' Question. A
|
||
public debate between Mr. George Bernard Shaw and Mr. G.W. Foote
|
||
... (1891)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and Charles Watts, Heroes and Martyrs of
|
||
Freethought. (1875)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and J.M. Wheeler, Crimes of Christianity. (1887)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and J.M. Wheeler, Editors, The Jewish Life of
|
||
Christ; being the Sepher Foldath Jeshu; or, Book of the
|
||
Generation of Jesus. Translated from the Hebrew. Edited (with an
|
||
historical preface and voluntinous notes). (1919)
|
||
|
||
Foote, G.W., and J.M. Wheeler, Voltaire: a sketch of his life and
|
||
works. (1894)
|
||
|
||
"Foote, George William," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
Forder, R., Saint Agnes and Saint Bridget and their Pagan
|
||
Prototypes. (1888)
|
||
|
||
Forder, R., 'There was War in Heaven.' An Infidel Sermon. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Freethinker. (1881 to date)
|
||
|
||
Gardiner, A.G., Life of Sir William Harcourt. (1923)
|
||
|
||
Gay, Susan E., Life Work of Mrs. Besant. (1913)
|
||
|
||
"George Jacob Holyoake," Review of Reviews,, v. 24, pp. 249-261
|
||
(1901)
|
||
|
||
Gill, Charles, The recent prosecutions (of G.W. Foote and others)
|
||
for blasphemy, and the debate in the House of Commons on the
|
||
Affirmation Bill., By the author of 'The Evolution of
|
||
Christianity.' (1883)
|
||
|
||
"Gimson, Josiah," Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists.
|
||
(1920)
|
||
|
||
"Gimson, Sydney Ansell," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
130
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Girdlestone, A.G., Christianity under Fire. Forty-six points of
|
||
attack by C. Bradlaugh, examined in a lecture, etc ... (1876).
|
||
|
||
Gladstone, W.E., The Impregnable Rock of Holy Scripture. Revised
|
||
and enlarged ... (1892)
|
||
|
||
Gladstone, W.E., Ingersoll on Christianity. (1888)
|
||
|
||
Gladstone, W.E., Parliamentary Oaths. Speech delivered in the
|
||
house of Commons, on the second reading of the parliamentary
|
||
Oaths Act Amendment Bill ... (1883)
|
||
|
||
Gladstone, W.E., "True and false Conceptions of the Atonement,"
|
||
Nineteenth Century, September, 1894.
|
||
|
||
Goss, C.W.F., A Descriptive Bibliography of the Writings of G.J.
|
||
Holyoake. (1908)
|
||
|
||
Gould, F.J., The Building of the Bible. Showing the chronological
|
||
order in which the books ... appeared ... (1898)
|
||
|
||
Gould, Frederick James, Chats with Pioneers of Modern Thought.
|
||
(1898)
|
||
|
||
Could, F.J., Life Story of a Humanist. (1923)
|
||
|
||
Gould, F.J., The New Pilgrim's Progress from Christianity to
|
||
Secularism. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Gould, F.J., "The New Secularism," Agnostic Annual and Ethical
|
||
Review (1902)
|
||
|
||
Gould, F.J., The Pioneers of Johnson's Court; a history of the
|
||
Rationalist Press Association from 1899 onwards (1929)
|
||
|
||
Gould, F.G., The Religion of the First Christians. (1901)
|
||
|
||
Gould, F.J., Stepping-stones to Agnosticism, With an introduction
|
||
by G.J. (Holyoake). (1889)
|
||
|
||
Gould, F.J., Will Women Help? An appeal to women to assist in
|
||
liberating modern, thought from theological hands (1900)
|
||
|
||
"Gould, Frederick James," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
Grant, Brewin, The Life of Joseph Barker the Infidel, done from
|
||
his own works, by B.G. (Reprinted from the Sheffield Christian
|
||
News.) (1860)
|
||
|
||
Grant, Brewin, Oaths and Infidels: or the believableness of
|
||
Unbelievers. A letter to Lord J. Russell. (1854)
|
||
|
||
Grant, Brewin, A Pen and Ink Sketch of Iconoclast (i.e. C.
|
||
Bradlaugh.) ... Seventh edition. (1860)
|
||
|
||
Greg, Percy, The Creed of a Secularist, By Lionel H. Holdreth
|
||
(pseudonym) (1857)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
131
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Greg, Percy, The Devil's Advocate. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Greg, Percy, Shadows of the Past. (1856)
|
||
|
||
Handsacre, Alan, The Revenues of Religion with a record of
|
||
established religion in England (1932)
|
||
|
||
Harrington, G.F. (Rev. William Mumford Baker), Northampton
|
||
Election Difficulties, dilated upon as a struggle by Bradlaugh
|
||
Atheism against Christianity. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Headingley, Adolphe S., The Biography of Charles Bradlaugh.
|
||
(1883)
|
||
|
||
Headiam, Stewart Duckworth, The London School Board in 1890: an
|
||
address, etc. (1890)
|
||
|
||
Headlan, Stewart, Priestcraft or Progress. (1873)
|
||
|
||
Heaford, William, Translator, Jesus Christ: His Apostles and
|
||
disciples in the twentieth century, by Count Camille de Renessee.
|
||
Translated ... by William Heaford (1907)
|
||
|
||
Hillier, William, Christianity, Science, and infidelity: a series
|
||
of letters ... showing the follies ... of atheism ... occasioned
|
||
by the return of C. Bradlaugh as a member of Parliament for
|
||
Northampton ... With a prefatory recommendation by H. Varley
|
||
(1881)
|
||
|
||
Hillier, William, Should Christians support Mr. Bradlaugh the
|
||
avowed Atheist, in his attempt to get into Parliament? Report of
|
||
a lecture, etc. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Himes, Norman E., Medical History of Contraception. (1936)
|
||
|
||
Himes, Norman E., Medical History of Contraception. (1934)
|
||
|
||
Hinton, J. Howard, the Elder, A Lecture on the conclusion of the
|
||
discussion between G.J. Holyoake and ... B. Grant. (1853)
|
||
|
||
Hinton, J. Howard, Secular Tracts,, (1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, The Apostles of Christ: a farce in Several
|
||
Acts.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, The Book of Esther; a specimen of what passes
|
||
as 'the inspired word of God.'
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Daniel the Dreamer: a biblical biography
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Does there exist a moral governor of the
|
||
Universe? An argument against the alleged universal benevolence
|
||
in nature (1870)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Facetiae for Freethinkers (collected by A.
|
||
Holyoake)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
132
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Heaven and Hell: Where Situated. A Search after
|
||
the objects of man's fervent hope and abiding terror (18-?)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Large or Small Families? on which side lies the
|
||
Balance of Comfort? (1870)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Ludicrous Aspects of Christianity; A response
|
||
to the Challenge of the Bishop of Manchester (18-?)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Secular Ceremonies. A Burial Service (1870)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, A Secular Prayer
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Sick Room Thoughts.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Superstition, and how it operates upon the
|
||
Human Mind, forcibly portrayed by Pitt, first Earl of Chatham,
|
||
with Commentary by Austin Holyoake
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Thoughts on Atheism; or, Can Man by searching
|
||
find out God (1870)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, Would a Republican Form of Government be
|
||
Suitable for England? (1873)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, Austin, and Charles Watts, Editors, Secularists' Manual
|
||
of Songs and Ceremonies. (1871)
|
||
|
||
"Holyoake, (Austin)," Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers by
|
||
J.M. Wheeler. (1889)
|
||
|
||
"Holyoake, Austin," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Affirmation and appeal case fund. (1862)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Alien features of Secularism. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., 'Among the Americans,' and 'A Stranger in
|
||
America.' (1881)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Anti-Boycott Papers. (1902)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., British Secular Institute of Communication and
|
||
Propagandism. (1857)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Bygones Worth Remembering. (1905)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Case of Thomas Pooley. (1857)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Changes in religious opinion in England since
|
||
1841.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Child's First Reading book. (1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The, Child's First Word book. (1854)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
133
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Child's Ladder of Knowledge. (1866)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Circular from Mr. Holyoake (for friends of
|
||
Secular Progress only). (1854)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Editor, The Circular of the Anti-persecution
|
||
league.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Civil Equality: the Parliamentary progress of the
|
||
Affirmation Bill (1863)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Common People. (1870)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Constitution and objects of Secular Societies
|
||
from the Manchester Conference Report. (1852)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Controversial Characteristics of the Scotch
|
||
People. (1854)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Cooperative Movement To-day. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Cumming Wrong; Colenso right. A reply to Dr.
|
||
Cumming's 'Moses right, Colenso wrong' (1863)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Death of Mrs. G.J. Holyoake, 1819-1884. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Defeat of the Rev. Sidney Gedge of Northampton in
|
||
the Queen's Bench. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Deliberate Liberalism; four instances of it
|
||
(1886)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Diary.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Eclectic Catalogue January 1866, (1866)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, C.J., English Secularism; a confession of belief (1896)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Essentials of Co-operative Education. (1898)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Excluded Evidence on the ground of speculative
|
||
opinion. (1865)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J. Freethought Lectureships in connection with "The
|
||
Secular World." (1862)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Government and the Working Man's press.
|
||
(1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The History of Co-operation in England: its
|
||
literature and its advocates (1875)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., History of Fleet Street House: a report of
|
||
Sixteen Years (1856)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The History of the Last Trial by Jury for Atheism
|
||
in England; a fragment of autobiography, submitted for the
|
||
perusal of Her Majesty's Attorney-general and the British clergy
|
||
(1850)
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
134
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., History of the Travelling Tax (1901)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Hostile and generous toleration. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Impossibility of Proving the Existence of God
|
||
by the design argument. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake G.J., The India and China tea mart; the history of
|
||
Indian and Chinese Teas (1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., In the Matter of the Affirmation Bill. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., In Memoriam, Austin Holyoake died April 10, 1874.
|
||
(1874)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Introduction to "Conspiracy of Grocers against
|
||
Public Education," by H.O. Arnold-Forster (1890?)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., John Stuart Mill as some of the working classes
|
||
knew him. (1873)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J, The Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial Co-
|
||
operative Society. (1897)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Jurisprudence and Amendment of the law. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Lectures and Debates: their terms, condition and
|
||
character (1860)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Ledru Rollin. (1855)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Lesson of the Hangman.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake G.J., Editor, "Letter to the Parliament and to the
|
||
Press" (Pyat, Felix) (1858)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Letter to the Subscribers of the Fund made during
|
||
my recent illness. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Liberal Situation; necessity for a qualified
|
||
franchise. A letter to Joseph Corven, jun. (1865)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Libra; or, the balances; a review of 'Mene Tekel'
|
||
(1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Life and Career of Charles Bradlaugh. (1891)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Life of Joseph Rayner Stephens, preacher and
|
||
political orator ... (1881)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Limits of Atheism; or, Why should sceptics be
|
||
outlaws? (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Logic of Death; or, Why should the Unbeliever
|
||
or Atheist fear to die? (1850)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Logic of Facts; or, Art of Reasoning by
|
||
Facts. (1848)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
135
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Logic of Life, deduced from the principle of
|
||
freethought (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Mr. Holyoake's Disconnection with the National
|
||
Reformer, and the correspondence which accounts for it (1862)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Murder as a Mode of Progress.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., A New defence of the Ballot, in consequence of
|
||
Mr. Mill's objections to it (1868)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., New Ideas of the Day. (1887)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Omar Khayyam; strange story of the Macmillans and
|
||
a Leicester Book-seller (1898)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., On Lecturing: its conditions and character (1860)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake G.J., The Opportunity of Ireland. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake: G.J., The Organisation of Freethinkers. (1852)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Organisation; not of Arms, but of Ideas. (1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Origin and Nature of Secularism. (1896)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G. J., The Outlaws of Freethought: the policy which may
|
||
secure an affirmation bill (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Editor, The Path I took and where it led me. An
|
||
autobiography and argument. By a Monmouthshire Farmer. (1894)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Patriotism by Charity. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Plain words about Seculitrism. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Plea for Affirmation in Parliament. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Preface to 'The Confessions of Rousseau.
|
||
Abridged' (1857)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Preface to 'Essays in Rationalism, by Charles
|
||
Robert Newman (1891)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Preface to 'Political Poems' by Victor Hugo and
|
||
Garibaldi, etc.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Principles of Secularism Briefly Explained.
|
||
(1859)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Provincial Mind. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Public Lessons for the Hangman. (1864)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Public performances of the.dead: a review of
|
||
American spiritualism (1865)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Public Speaking and Debate. (1875)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
136
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Reciprocity Explained. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Aolyoake, G.J., Report of the Fleet Street House. (1858)
|
||
|
||
Ifolyoake, G.J., Rich Man's Six, and Poor Man's one Day: a letter
|
||
to Lord Palmerston (1856)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Robbing a Thousand Peters to pay one Paul. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Robert Owen, Precursor of social progress (1902)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., A Secular Catechism for children; adapted from
|
||
the Rev. H.W. Crosskey's Catechism of religion for the use of
|
||
children (1854)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., A Secular Prayer by Mr., G.J. Holyoake in
|
||
invertiel Church, Kirlcaldy (1854)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The secular preacher. With a picture of the Rev.
|
||
Thomas Binney (1857)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Secular Prospects in Death. The late Councillor
|
||
Josiah Gimson (1883)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Secular Responsibility, (1873)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Secularism and the place it Occupies. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Secularism distiguished from Unitarianism. (1855)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Secularism, the practical philosophy of the
|
||
people, (1854)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Secularism a Religion which gives Heaven no
|
||
trouble ... (1882)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G. J., Secularism; its sphere and its services, (1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Self-Help a Hundred Years Ago. (1858)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Self-Help by the People: the history of the
|
||
Rochdale Pioneers, 1844-1992 (1893)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life. (1892)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., "Socialism and its advocates: a letter from Mr.
|
||
Joseph Barker; with the reply of the Editor of The Reasoner"
|
||
(1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Social Ideas of the People, a Hundred Years Ago.
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Social means of Promoting Temperance with
|
||
remarks on errors in its advocacy. (1859)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Suppressed Lecture at Cheltenham. (1864)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., A Suppressed Princess. (1863)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
137
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Thomas Cooper delineated as convert and
|
||
controversialist. A companion to his missionary wanderings (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G. J., Three Lectures in Heywood, in answer to Mr. E.
|
||
Grubb's lectures, entitled 'Infidelity Unmasked' (1852)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Tracts for the Thoughtful. (1863)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G. J., Travels in search of a Settler's Guide-Book of
|
||
America and Canada (1884)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Trial of Theism. (1858)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Two Great Preachers: The Rev. Hugh Price Hughes,
|
||
the Rev. Dr. Joseph Barker; or, Appreciation distinct from
|
||
concurrence (1903)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J. The Uselessness of Prayer. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Value of Biography, in the formation of
|
||
individual character illustrated by the life and writings of
|
||
Charles Ruce Pemberton (1845)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Warpath of Opinion. (189-)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Wayside points for New Roads; or, defences of
|
||
Freethinking (1852-1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., What may England yet do for Italy? (1861)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., What Would follow on the effacement of
|
||
Christianity? (1893)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Why do the Clergy avoid discussion, and the
|
||
Philosophers discountenance it? (1852)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., Working-class Representation: its conditions and
|
||
consequences ... (1868)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., The Workman and the Suffrage. Letters to Lord
|
||
John Russell, M.P., and the 'Daily News' (1859)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J. and C. Bradlaugh, Secularism, scepticism, and
|
||
atheism. Verbatim Report of the proceedings of a two-nights'
|
||
public debate between Messrs. G.J. Holyoake and C. Bradlaugh
|
||
(1870)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Rev. Brewin Grant, Christianity and
|
||
Secularism. Report of a public discussion between B. Grant and
|
||
G.J. Holyoake. (1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Rev. Brewin Grant Discussion on secularism.
|
||
Report of a Public discussion between, the Rev. Brewin Grant and
|
||
G.J. Holyoake. (1854)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Rev. Brewin Grant, Part one of the
|
||
Correspondence between the Rev. Brewin Grant and Mr. G.J.
|
||
Holyoake. (1852)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
138
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Rev. Brewin Grant, Part II of the
|
||
Correspondence Between the Rev. Brewn Grant and G.J. Holyoake.
|
||
(1852)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Rev. Brewin Grant Review of a controversy
|
||
between the Rev. Brewin Grant and G.J. Holyoake ... on the
|
||
question 'What advantages would accrue to mankind generally and
|
||
the working classes in particular, by the removal of Christianity
|
||
and the substitution of Secularis in its place?' (1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Dr. Frederic R. Lees, Public Discussion of
|
||
Teetotalism and the Maine Law, between George Jacob Holyoake,
|
||
Esq., and Dr. Frederic R. Lees (1856)
|
||
|
||
Holyoak, G. J., and Mr. G.E. Lomax, Report of a discussion on the
|
||
Maine Law between Mr. G.J. Holyoake ... and Mr. G.E. Lomax.
|
||
(1858)
|
||
|
||
Hiolyoake, G.J., and others, Giordano Bruno ... (1889)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Rev. J.H. Rutherford, Christianity versus
|
||
Secularism: a public discussion ... between the Rev. J.H.
|
||
Rutherford and Mr, G.J. Holyoalce (1854)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Rev. J.H. Rutherford, Correspondence between
|
||
Mr. George Jacob Holyoake ... and the Rev. John H. Rutherford.
|
||
(1853)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Amos Scotton, The Jubilee History of the
|
||
Derby Cooperative Provident Societal, Ltd., 1850-1900 (1900)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and Henry Townley, Public Ditscussion on the
|
||
Being of a God. (1852)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J. and C. Watts, English Secularism and The Progress
|
||
of society. (1880)
|
||
|
||
Holyoake, G.J., and J.F. Winks, Both Sides of the Debate between
|
||
Mr. J. F. Winks and Mr. G.J. Holyoake. (1852)
|
||
|
||
"Holyoake, George Jacob," Biographical Dictionary of
|
||
Freethinker's. (1889)
|
||
|
||
"Holyoake, George Jacob," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
"Holyoake, George Jacob," Chambers' Encyclopedia.
|
||
|
||
"Holyoake, George Jacob," Who's Who (British). (1906)
|
||
|
||
Hooper, Charles E., The R.P.A.: Its Origin and Growth (1908)
|
||
|
||
Hopkins, John Baker, "The Republican Impeachment," Gentleman's
|
||
Magazine, November, 1872.
|
||
|
||
Hopkins, John Baker, "The Republican Impeachment," Gentleman's
|
||
Magazine, February, 1873.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
139
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Hornibrook, Mrs. Ettie A., Sexual Health and Birth Control.
|
||
(1925)
|
||
|
||
How C. Bradlaugh, M.P., was treated by the House of Commons.
|
||
|
||
Hughes, Dorothea Price, The Life of Hugh Price Hughes. (1904)
|
||
|
||
Hughes, Rev. Hugh Price, The Atheist Shoemaker. A page in the
|
||
history of the West London Mission (1889)
|
||
|
||
Hughes, Thomas, James Frasier, second bishop of Manchester; a
|
||
memoir (1887)
|
||
|
||
"The Human Origin and Imperfections of the Bible."
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseud., Against Socialism. (1889)
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseud., Charles Bradlaugh, M.P., and the Irish Nation.
|
||
(1885)
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseud., A Fish in Labor; or, Jonah and the Whale
|
||
(1887)
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseud., Is God the First Cause? (1883)
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseud., The Horrors of War. (1870)
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseud., Jacob the Wrestler. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseudo, Observations on the extension of "Contagious
|
||
Diseases Act," to civil populations (1869)
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseud., Socialism a Curse. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Humanitas, pseud., Twelve Reasons against Taking away Life as a
|
||
Punishment. (185?)
|
||
|
||
Hutton, R.H., "Secularism," Expositor'. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Hyndman, H.M., Further Reminiscences. (1912)
|
||
|
||
The Investigator; a journal of secularism. (1854-59)
|
||
|
||
Ion, pseud., Blasts from Bradlough's own Trumpet. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Kent, William, London for Heretics. (1932)
|
||
|
||
Knight, William, An Unsigned article containing an inalysis of
|
||
Bradlaugh's latest theistic argument in 'Freethinker's Text
|
||
Book', British Quarterly Review, July, 1871.
|
||
|
||
Knowlton, Charles, Fruits of Philosophy.
|
||
|
||
Laing, F.H., The Catholic Freethinker's Flysheet. Mr. Bradlaugh
|
||
the Model Protestant (1883)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
140
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Langford, Dr. John Alfred, Christianity, not Seculatism, the
|
||
practical Philosophy of the People: a reply to G.J. Holyoake's
|
||
Tract 'Secularism, the Practical Philosophy of the People' (1854)
|
||
|
||
Lansbury, George, My Life. (1928)
|
||
|
||
"Law, Mrs. Harriet," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists (1920)
|
||
|
||
Leeds Secular Society, The Converted Lecturer, or Mr. Gordon's
|
||
repudiation of Secular principles examined (1862)
|
||
|
||
The Leicester Reasoner. (1902)
|
||
|
||
The Liberal (1879)
|
||
|
||
The Liberty of Bequest Intelligencer (1892)
|
||
|
||
Linton, W.J,. Memories. (1895)
|
||
|
||
Lloyd, John T., From Christian Pulpit to Secular Platform. (1903)
|
||
|
||
Lloyd, John T., God. (1904)
|
||
|
||
Lloyd, John T., God-eating.... (1921
|
||
|
||
Lloyd, John T., Prayer: its origin, history and futility. (1916)
|
||
|
||
"Lloyd, John T., "Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists.
|
||
(1920)
|
||
|
||
London Secular Society, Constitution and Laws of the London
|
||
Secular Society. (1853?)
|
||
|
||
Lyall, Edna, (Bayly, Ada Ellen) Donovan: a Modern Englishman.
|
||
(1888)
|
||
|
||
Lyall, Edna, (Bayly, Ada Ellen) We Too. (1884)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalis's.
|
||
(1920)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, From Rome to Rationalism; or, Why I left the
|
||
Church (1897)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, George Jacob Holyoake. (1922)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, Life and Letters of George Jacob Holyoake. (1908)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, Modern Rationalism. (1897)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, Religion of the Twentieth Century. (1899)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, Translater, The Riddle of the Universe at the
|
||
close of the nineteenth century, by Ernst Haeckel (1900)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, Robert Owen., (1920)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
141
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, Twelve Years in a Monastery. (1897)
|
||
|
||
"McCabe, Joseph," Who's Who (British). (1932)
|
||
|
||
McCabe, Joseph, and Georges Darien, Can We Disarm. (1899)
|
||
|
||
McCann, Rev. J., Anti-Secularist Lectures. (1867)
|
||
|
||
McCann, Rev. James, The Death of Secularism. (1867?)
|
||
|
||
McCann, Rev. James, Secularist Objctions to the Bible. (1867)
|
||
|
||
Mackay, Charles R., Life of Bradlaugh. (1888)
|
||
|
||
McLaren, A.D., The Christian's Sunday, its history and fruits
|
||
(1922)
|
||
|
||
McLaren, A.D., Infidel Death-beds.... (1933)
|
||
|
||
Magee, William Connor, and C. Bradlaugh, Christianity in Relation
|
||
to freethought, scepticism, and faith: Three discourses by the
|
||
bishop of Peterborough, with special replies by Charles Bradlaugh
|
||
(1892)
|
||
|
||
Mallock, W.H., Is Life Worth Living? (1879)
|
||
|
||
Mann, Tom, Tom Mann's Memoirs. (1923)
|
||
|
||
Mann, Walter, Christanity in, China: an exposure of foreign
|
||
missions (1927)
|
||
|
||
Mann, Walter, Modern Materialism. (1921)
|
||
|
||
Mann, Walter, Pagan and Christian Moranly. (1917)
|
||
|
||
Mann, Walter, The Religion of Famous Men. (1916)
|
||
|
||
Mann, Walter, Science and the Soul. (1919)
|
||
|
||
Marryat, Florence, Life and Letters of Captain Marryat. (1872)
|
||
|
||
Malthus, Thomas, Essay on the Principle of Population. (1798)
|
||
|
||
Maughan, John, Secularism,; what it is. (1858)
|
||
|
||
Maughan, John,. Editor, The Stepping-Stone.
|
||
|
||
Mawer, W., The Latest Constitutional Struggle: a register of
|
||
events which have occurred since April 2, 1880. (1883)
|
||
|
||
May, Thomas Erskine, Constitutional History of England. (1880)
|
||
|
||
Maynard, John of Plymouth, Exposure of the Infidel Notions of Dr.
|
||
Aveling on the Parentage of Man. (1882)
|
||
|
||
Mencken, H.L., Treatise on Right and Wrong. (1934)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
142
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Miall, Bernard, Translator, My Years of Exile; reminiscenses of a
|
||
socialist, by Eduard Bernstein (1921)
|
||
|
||
Mill, John Stuart, Autobiography. (1873)
|
||
|
||
Mill, John Stuart, Nature, the Utility of Religion and Theism.
|
||
(1887?)
|
||
|
||
"Mill (John Stuart), " Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers.
|
||
(1889)
|
||
|
||
"Mill, John Stuart," Biographical Dictioitary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
Molesworth, W.N., History of England (1830-1874) (1874)
|
||
|
||
Morley, John, Life of William Ewart Gladstone. (1903)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., The Bible and Evolution. (1890)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., The Bible God and his favorites. (188-?)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Bible Horrors: or, True Blasphemy (1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Bible-makers: Moses, Joshua ... and others
|
||
(1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Bible Saints and Sinners. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., The Brain and the Soul. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Bruno and Spinoza. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Christianity: a degrading religion (1884)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Christianity and Evolution. (1892)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Christianity Unworthy of God. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Darwin against Moses. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Design and Natural Selection. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Fictitious Gods. (1890?)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Health, Wealth, and Happiness, (1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Lectures and Essays.
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Malthusianism v. socialism. a debate between
|
||
Moss and H. Quelch ... 1899
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Man and the Lower Animals (1886)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Miracle Workers. (188-)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Natural Man. (1884)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
143
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Nature and the Gods, (1884)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., The Old Faith and the New. (188-)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Two Revelations. (1900?)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., The Secular Faith, (1886)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Socrates, Buddha, and Jesus. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., Waves of Freethought
|
||
|
||
"Moss (Arthur B.)," Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers.
|
||
(1889)
|
||
|
||
"Moss, Arthur B., Biographical Dictioitary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
Moss, Arthur B., and Agnes Rollo Wilkie, Was Jesus an Impostor? a
|
||
discussion between Agnes Rollo Wilkie and Arthur B. Moss (1885)
|
||
|
||
Mr. Bradlaugh and the House of Commons. From a Hindoo Point of
|
||
view. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Mr. Bradlaugh and the Oath Question. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Mr Bradlaugh, the Member for Northampton. (1881?)
|
||
|
||
The National Reformer. (1860-1893)
|
||
|
||
National Secular Society, General Information for Freethinkers
|
||
(1921)
|
||
|
||
National Secular Society, Leaflets, 1-4, 6-8. New Series, 1, 7,
|
||
9. (1917-1920?)
|
||
|
||
National Secular Society, The Impossibility of Proving the
|
||
Existence of God by the argument from Design.
|
||
|
||
The National Secular Society's Almanack. (1869 ff)
|
||
|
||
Neale, Francis, A Freethinker's View of the Holy Bible.
|
||
|
||
Neale, Francis, Heterodox Essays. (188-)
|
||
|
||
Neff, Emery, Carlyle and Mill (1926)
|
||
|
||
The New Generation, for January, 1922.
|
||
|
||
The New House Agitator. (November, 1869)
|
||
|
||
Newman, Charles Robert, Essays in Rationalism ... (1891)
|
||
|
||
A Night with Bradlaugh! (1882)
|
||
|
||
"Oath," Chambers' Encyclopaedia.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
144
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Owen, Robert, The Life of Robert Owen. (1920)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
Blasphenzy.
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
Parker, Joseph, Rev., Six Chapters on Secularism. (1854)
|
||
|
||
Paulson, E., The Crimes of Atheism. (1886)
|
||
|
||
Peers, Robert, Thomas Cooper. (1931)
|
||
|
||
Percival, P., The Position of Positivism, with some remarks on
|
||
the Position of Secularism (1891)
|
||
|
||
Peterson, Houston, Havelock Ellis: Philosopher of Love.
|
||
|
||
The Pioneer (1903-4)
|
||
|
||
Plumptre, C.E., Miss, "Charles Bradlaugh: an Appeal," Westminster
|
||
Review, October, 1891
|
||
|
||
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|
||
during Queen Victoria's Reign. (1902)
|
||
|
||
Podmore, Frank, Robert Owen. (1906)
|
||
|
||
The Present Day (1883-1886)
|
||
|
||
"Prize Essay on Infidelity," issued by the Evangelical Alliance
|
||
|
||
The Propagandist (1862)
|
||
|
||
The Prosecution of Messrs. Foote and Ramsay for Blaphemy (1883)
|
||
|
||
Quasimodo, pseud., Joseph Barker, and his expulsion from the
|
||
secular body. (1861)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
The Radical. (1886-89)
|
||
|
||
Ramsey, William James, In Prison for Blasphemy. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Rationalist Press Association, Let Reason Prevail. (1935?)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
(1875)
|
||
|
||
Pees, Rev., Seculorist's Catechism.
|
||
|
||
Reid, R., Gambetta and Bradlaugh. (188?)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
145
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
"Religious Heresies of the Working Classes." Westminster Review,
|
||
1st quarter, 1862.
|
||
|
||
The Republican. (1880 ff.)
|
||
|
||
Republican Chronicle. (1875 ff)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, James, Mr. Holyoake and his Assailants. (1862)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, James, Secularists and the 'Investigator'. (1858)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, James, Secularists and their Slanderers. (1858)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., Charles Bradlaugh. (1920)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., Culture and Action. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., The Eight Hour Question. (1893)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., The Fallacy of Saving. (1892)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., A History of Freethought in the 19th Century.
|
||
(1930)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., "Introduction" to The Natural History of
|
||
Religion. By David Hume (1889)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
1909. (1908)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., The Pleasures of Malignity. (1884)
|
||
|
||
Hobertson, J.M., The Population Question. (189-)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., The Priest and the Child. (189-)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., "Reminiscence of Bradlaugh," R.P.A. Annual and
|
||
Ethical Review, 1908,
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., Short History of Freethought, ancient and
|
||
modern. (1906)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., Socialism and Malthusianism. (1885)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., Editor, Speeches by Charles Bradlaugh. ...
|
||
(189-?)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., Thomas Paine. (1888)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., Torryism and Barbarism. (1885)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
146
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., What Has Christianity Done? (187?)
|
||
|
||
Robertson, J.M., Why Preserve the Monarchy? (187?)
|
||
|
||
"Robertson, (John Mackinnon)," Biographical Dictionary of
|
||
Freethinkers. (1889)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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||
|
||
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|
||
1887.
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||
|
||
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|
||
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||
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||
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|
||
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||
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||
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||
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||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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||
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||
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||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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||
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||
|
||
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||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
Secular Society, Limited, A Fight for right. The decision of the
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
Secularist, The Creed of a Secularist. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Secularist (1876-1877)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
147
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Secular Review (1881?-)
|
||
|
||
Secular Review (1876-1877)
|
||
|
||
Secular Review and Secularist, (1877-?)
|
||
|
||
The Secular World and Social Economist. (1863-64)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
(1854)
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
148
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Stead, W.T., Interviews with Mr. W.T, stead on the Church of the
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
secularism
|
||
|
||
Stephens, E., Atheism and Future Punishment. (1878)
|
||
|
||
Stevenson, R.L., Underwoods.
|
||
|
||
Stopes Marie, Contraception.
|
||
|
||
Stopes, Marie, Early Days of Birth Control. (1922)
|
||
|
||
Superstition and Fanaticism: their disastrous effects upon
|
||
mankind
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
Symes Joseph, Christianity Essentially a Persecuting Religion,
|
||
(1882)
|
||
|
||
Symes, Joseph, Christianity and Slavery. (1880)
|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
|
||
Symes, Joseph, Man's Place in Nature; or, Man, an animal among
|
||
animals (1878)
|
||
|
||
Symes, Joseph, The Methodist Conference and Eternal Punishment.
|
||
(1877)
|
||
|
||
Symes, Joseph, The New Testament Manuscripts; or, Christianity
|
||
completely undermined (1906)
|
||
|
||
Symes, Joseph, Philosophic Atheism; a bundle of fragments (1879)
|
||
|
||
Symes, Joseph, Universal Despair; or, Who will be damned if
|
||
Christianity be true (1883)
|
||
|
||
Symes, Joseph, and G. St. Clair, Is Atheism or Theism more
|
||
rational? a discussion between Mr. Joseph Symes and Mr. George
|
||
St. Clair (1882)
|
||
|
||
"Symes (Joseph)," Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers. (1889)
|
||
|
||
"Symes, Joseph," Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists.
|
||
|
||
"Tributes to Dr. Annie Besant, D.L., P.T.S., Servant of Humanity.
|
||
From Representative Indians and Europeans," New India, August 25,
|
||
1924.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
149
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Troup, Emile Josephine, Compiler, Hymns of Modern Thought. (1900)
|
||
|
||
The Truth Seeker.
|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
|
||
|
||
"Vance, Edith Maurice," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
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|
||
|
||
Varley, Henry, An Address to the Electors of the Borough of
|
||
Northampton. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Varley, Henry, Mr. Bradlaugh Shown to be utterly unfit to
|
||
represent any English constituency. (1881)
|
||
|
||
Verbatim Report of the two trials of G.W. Foote, W.J. Ramsay and
|
||
H.A. Kemp, for blasphemous libel in the Christmas Number of the
|
||
'Freethinker' ... (1883)
|
||
|
||
Wagner, D.O., The Church of England and Social Reform since 1854
|
||
(1930)
|
||
|
||
Ward, Mrs. Humphrey, The History of David Grieve. (1892)
|
||
|
||
Ward, Mrs. Humphrey, Robert Elsmere. (1891?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Alleged resurrection of Jesus: was it a fact?
|
||
(187-?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Atheism and the French Revolution. (188?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Atheism and the Gloucester Execution. (187-?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The BibIe and Christianity. (1876)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Bible: is it reliable as a guide? (1873)
|
||
|
||
Watts, C., and G.W. Foote, Editors, British Secular Almanack,
|
||
1878 ff.
|
||
|
||
Watts Charles,The Character of Christ. (187?)
|
||
|
||
Watts: Charles, The Christian Deity. (1873)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Christian Evidences Criticised, A Reply to the
|
||
Christian Evidence Society (1870)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Christianity: its nature and influence on
|
||
civilization. (1868?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Christian's Notion of Man s ultimate State of
|
||
Existence. (186-?)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
150
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Christian Scheme of Redemption. (1868)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Claims of Christianity Examined from a
|
||
rationalist Standpoint. (1895)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, A Defense of Secular Principles. (187?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The English Church a Failure as a Reforming
|
||
agency. (1880)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The English Monarchy and American Republicanism.
|
||
(1873)
|
||
|
||
Watts Charles, English nonconformity: what has it done for mental
|
||
freedom and national progress? (187-)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Freethought and modern Progress. (1868)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Government and the People: a plea for reform,
|
||
(1873)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Is Immortality a Fact? (1902)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Modern Defense of Christianity. (188-?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Moral value of the Bible, (187-)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Philosophy of Secularism. (1890?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, A Refutation of Mr. Bradlaugh's Inaccuracies and
|
||
Misrepresentations. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Watt's, Charles, Republicanism. (1873)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Science and the Bible Antagonistic. (1874)
|
||
|
||
Watts; Charles; A Secular burial service. Arranged by and
|
||
published for the council of the British Secular Union (188?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Secular Ceremonies: the Naming of Infants (1869)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, The Secular Duties of Life. (187?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Secular Morality: What is it? An Exposition and a
|
||
defense (1880)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Secular and Theological Forces. (187?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Secularism and Christianity. (1867)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Secularism; its principles and its duties. (1880)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Secularism in its various Relations.
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles; Spiritualism, a delusion. (1900)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Theological Persecution and Freethought
|
||
Martyrdom. (188-?)
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
151
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, Why am I an Atheist? or, Theism criticised (188?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, and Rev. Wm. Adamson, Full Report of the Public
|
||
Discussion on the Question, is the Belief in an Infinite Personal
|
||
Being Reasonable and Beneficial? between the Rev. Wm. Adamson ...
|
||
and Mr. C. Watts ... (1872)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, and B.H. Cooper, Debate on the Christian
|
||
Evidences between Mr. C. Watts and B.H. Cooper, Esq. ... (1871)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, and T. Crow, Merits and demerits of Secularism.
|
||
Verbatim report of a discussion betiveen T. Crow and C. Watts ...
|
||
(1876)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, and Alexander Jamieson, Verbatim report of four
|
||
nights' discussion on the question: 'Is Secularism superior to
|
||
Christianity?' and 'Is Christianity Superior to Secularism?'
|
||
Between Dr. Alexander Jamieson ... and Mr. Charles Watts ...
|
||
(1895)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, and Alexander Jamieson, Verbatim report of three
|
||
nights' discussion of the questions: Is it reasonable to believe
|
||
in the existence of a powerful and intelligent being distinct
|
||
from the material universe? and Has Man a soul that will live in
|
||
a future State? Between Dr. Alexander Jamieson ... and Mr.
|
||
Charles Watts ... (1894)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, and Dr. George sexton, Debate on Christianity ...
|
||
between ... G. Sexton ... and C. W., etc. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Charles, and Rev. A. Stewart, Four nights' Public
|
||
Discussion between the Rev. A. Stewart ... and Mr. C. Watts, on
|
||
Is the Belief in the Being of an Infinite Personal God
|
||
Reasonable? and Are the Four Gospels Authentic and worthy of
|
||
credit? (1873)
|
||
|
||
"Watts (Charles)," Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers.
|
||
(1889)
|
||
|
||
"Watts, Charles," Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists.
|
||
(1920)
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, The Christian Doctrine of the Destruction of the
|
||
World Examined and refuted. (1865)
|
||
|
||
Watts John, The Christian Doctrine of Man's Depravity Refuted.
|
||
(186-?)
|
||
|
||
Watts: John, The Criminal History of the Clergyman. (1857)
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, The Devil: who he is, and whence he came.
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, Half Hours with Freethinkers. (1856-57)
|
||
|
||
Watts John, The Heart of Man Shown not to be Deceitful above all
|
||
hings, and Desperately Wicked (Jeremiah Refuted) (1961)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
152
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, Is Man Immortal?
|
||
|
||
Watts' John, The Logic and Philosophy of Atheism. (1865)
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, The Miracles and Prophecies of the Bible no Proof of
|
||
Christian Truth. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, The Origin of Man. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, Rev. Brewin Grant Extinguished. (1861)
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, Secularism, 'the one thing needful.' (186?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, John, Who Were the Writers of the New Testament?
|
||
|
||
"Watts (John)," Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers. (1889)
|
||
|
||
"Watts, John," Biographical Dictionary of Modern Ratioalists.
|
||
(1920)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Kate Eunice, Editor, Christianity and Agnosticism. A
|
||
Correspondence between a clergyman of the Church in Scotland and
|
||
George Anderson (1899)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Kate Eunice, Christianity: defective and unnecessary.
|
||
(1900?)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Kate Eunice, Mrs. Watts' Reply to Mr. Bradlaugh's
|
||
misrepresentations. (1877)
|
||
|
||
Watts, Kate Eunice, Reasons for not accepting Christianity.
|
||
|
||
Webb, Beatrice, My Apprenticeship. (1929)
|
||
|
||
Webb, Sidney and Beatrice, Industrial Democracy. (1897)
|
||
|
||
Weekly Times and Echo
|
||
|
||
Wells, Geoffrey Harry, (pseud., West, Geoffrey) Mrs. Annie Besant
|
||
(1927)
|
||
|
||
Wells, Geoffrey Harry, (pseud., West, Geoffrey) Six Brilliant
|
||
English Women; ... Annie Besant (1930)
|
||
|
||
West, Geoffrey, The Life of Annie Besant. (1929)
|
||
|
||
Wharton, Charles H., Mr. Bradlaugh and the Oath. A Letter
|
||
addressed to ... the members of the House of Commons (1882)
|
||
|
||
What Secularists are and what are their aims.
|
||
|
||
Wheeler, Joseph Mazzini, Bible Studies; essays on phallic worship
|
||
and other curious rites and customs (1892)
|
||
|
||
Wheeler, Joseph Mazzini, Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers
|
||
(1889)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
153
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Wheeler, Joseph Mazzini, Footsteps of the Past. Essays on human
|
||
Evolution.
|
||
|
||
Wheeler, Joseph Mazvini, Compiler, Freethought Readings and
|
||
Secular Songs. (189-.)
|
||
|
||
Wheeler, Joseph Mazzini, Introduction to "An Essay on Miracles,"
|
||
by David Hume (1882)
|
||
|
||
Wheeler, Joseph Mazzini, Paganism in Christian Festivals. (1932)
|
||
|
||
Wheeler, Joseph Mazzini, and G.W. Foote, Voltaire: a sketch of
|
||
his life and works. With selections from his writings. (1894)
|
||
|
||
"Wheeler, Joseph Mazzini," Biographical Dictionary of Modern
|
||
Rationalists. (1920)
|
||
|
||
White, Dr. Frank W,, Birth Control and its opponents. (1935)
|
||
|
||
White, Frederick, William T. Stead. (1925)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Bernard Shaw explained. (1925)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Birth Control and Race culture, (1925)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, The Case against Theism. (1922?)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, The Evolution of Morality. (1933)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Free thought on Sex! The social and personal
|
||
aspects of sex and race culture (1922)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Gods, Devils, and Men. (1928)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Jesus Christ: Man, God, or Myth (1921)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, A Lesson in Socialism from Jack London's
|
||
'White Fang' (1913?)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Man and his Gods (1921)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, A Modern Outline of Evolution. (1933)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Religion and Woman. (1928)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Sex and Religion. (1930)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Spiritualism Explained. (1928)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Towards a Better World. (1931)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, Unemployment: causes and remedies, (1933)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, The Unfair Sex. The truth about women (1930)
|
||
|
||
Whitehead, George, What is Morality? (1925)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
154
|
||
|
||
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SECULAR MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
Whitmore, Rev. C.J., What Becomes of the Infidel Leaders?
|
||
|
||
Wigan Examiner (October, 1860, to February, 1861)
|
||
|
||
Williams, Mrs. Gertrude Leavenworth, The Passionate Pilgrim; a
|
||
life of Annie Besant (1931)
|
||
|
||
Winterton, F., There is a God. (1883)
|
||
|
||
Working Man, The fallacies of Atheism exposed. A reply to Dr.
|
||
Bradlaugh's 'Plea for Atheism.' (1882)
|
||
|
||
Yorkshire Tribune, (July, 1855-September, 1855)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please send us
|
||
a list that includes Title, Author, publication date, condition
|
||
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||
|
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**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
155
|
||
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