Cato Street Conspiracy

Eighteenth Century Plot to Overthrow British Government

© Rupert Taylor

Sep 30, 2009
Inside Newgate Prison., Public Domain
The French Revolution of 1789-99 stirred the passions of English people hoping for a chance to wrest power from privileged elites.

In December 1792, schoolteacher Thomas Spence arrived in London from his home in Newcastle. Spence had been greatly influenced by the writing of Thomas Paine, in particular his 1791 book The Rights of Man.

Thomas Spence Expanded on Paine’s Ideas

Once in London, Thomas Spence began agitating for a more egalitarian society; he wanted to bring socialism to Britain. Spartacus Educational describes some of his activities: “He wrote books, pamphlets and produced a journal, Pigs Meat, where he argued for the radical transformation of society. The publication of this material resulted in him enduring several periods of imprisonment.”

Spence said the land of Britain belonged to all the people not just the wealthy landowners. One of his rallying cries was that “if all the land in Britain was shared out equally, there would be enough to give every man, woman, and child seven acres each.”

He and his followers met in London pubs and at night they would chalk slogans on walls such as “The Land is the People’s Farm” and “Spence’s Plan and Full Bellies.”

Peaceful Agitation Sidelined by Arthur Thistlewood

When Thomas Spence died in 1814, his friends and followers formed The Society of Spencean Philanthropists to press for his ideals to become realities. The group eventually came under the control of Arthur Thistlewood who thought a more robust strategy than chalking slogans on walls and writing pamphlets was called for. Thistlewood wanted a violent revolution to overthrow the government, just as the people of France had done.

By now, the Spencean society was well known to the authorities and several government spies infiltrated the group and reported on its activities. One of these police agents was George Edwards who may well have provoked the Spenceans into cooking up a plot to attack the government.

Cato Street Hayloft Raided

In early 1820, the British government got wind of Arthur Thistlewood’s plans to assassinate the British Cabinet. It was time to act.

On the evening of February 23, 1820, police raided a stable in Cato Street, where Thistlewood and his co-conspirators had gathered in the hayloft to prepare for their attack. Thistlewood killed a policeman in the scuffle, but he and his gang were arrested.

One of them, a butcher named James Ings told police how the plot was to unfold.

Britain’s National Archives says that Ings would be the first to enter Lord Harrowby’s house in Grosvenor Square where the Cabinet was supposed to be meeting for dinner. He was to be “armed with a pair of pistols, a cutlass, and a knife. He intended to behead every member of the Cabinet, then take away the heads of Lords Castlereagh and Sidmouth in bags to display them on spikes on Westminster Bridge.”

Trial and Sentencing of Cato Street Conspirators

Justice moved swiftly in those days. On April 28, 1820, Thistlewood and four of his cronies were found guilty of high treason, the trial being described in detail in The Newgate Calendar. Then “the Lord Chief Justice passed sentence in the usual form upon them, directing that, after they should have been hanged, their heads should be severed from their bodies, and their bodies divided into four quarters, which should be at the disposal of his Majesty.”

Three days later Thistlewood and his companions met the hangman. According to executedtoday.com, “The crowd was reportedly vocally supportive of the condemned.”

Other members of the gang were transported to the colonies for life.


The copyright of the article Cato Street Conspiracy in Georgian/Victorian Britain is owned by Rupert Taylor. Permission to republish Cato Street Conspiracy in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Inside Newgate Prison., Public Domain
       


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