Intergroup dynamics within the 1831 reform riots: towards a new social psycho-history
Lead Research Organisation:
University of the West of England
Department Name: Fac of Arts Creative Ind and Education
Abstract
In October 1831 a wave of disturbances swept across England after the rejection of the Second Reform Bill in the House of Lords. These 'reform riots' began with serious disorder in the East Midlands (Derby, Nottingham) followed by unrest in towns in the West and Southwest. The wave culminated in Bristol with the most serious riot in nineteenth century Britain. Lasting three days, crowds destroyed several major institutions by fire and released prisoners from four jails. The riot was violently suppressed by military units with hundreds of people killed and wounded.
Historical analysis of the Bristol riot has led to two principal narratives; the first characterises the event as the criminal actions of a mindless, irrational, drunken 'mob', and the second as a reform protest. However, neither of these accounts satisfactorily explains how the protest developed into collective violence on such a scale nor how the agenda of the rioters, reflected in their choice of targets, changed over three days. Equally, the spread of the 'reform riots' across the country remains largely unexplained. What were the relationships between these events and Bristol?
The proposed research breaks new ground for historians in that it will be carried out using concepts and principles from social psychology, where social identity researchers have had success in explaining the limits of behaviour in rioting crowds; the role of authorities in the dynamics of such riots; and the process through which rioting spreads across different geographical locations. Sharing social identity allows a crowd to act as one and also specifies what counts as appropriate behaviour, through the notion of a group norm. Since social identities are based on relationships with other groups, when these relationships change so do social identities - including group norms and ability to take collective action. This social identity approach can therefore help explain the escalation of crowd events into conflict and the spread of disorder; why some groups join in with a wave of rioting but others do not.
The social identity approach has not, hitherto, been applied to disturbances in the late-modern period (1750-1900), which is one aim of the present project. In addition, we will critically evaluate our research and analysis in order to create a user-friendly procedure for historians and others applying social identity concepts to analyse similar late-modern disturbances.
The research involves collecting evidence about all of the reform related disturbances in October 1831 in order to produce triangulated accounts of each event. Of particular interest would be the actions of the crowds and the authorities. For example, how participants gained information about previous disturbances in the wave of unrest, why, how and where the crowd assembled, how leadership emerged and what targets were selected for action. Similarly, we are interested in how the authorities behaved, whether they were aware in advance of the event, how they reacted before and during the disturbance and what kind of coercion (if any) was used to deal with the disorder. The research will then focus on the mentalities and feelings of the participants. Of particular import will be sources of evidence that explicate the motivations of crowd members; how they reacted to information about reform protests; their perceptions of legitimacy; and how they understood themselves and their 'opposition' as social groups. The kinds of evidence required range from eye-witness accounts of what crowds were discussing, chanting or heckling, to memoirs, and visual and material sources such as hand-bills, posters and banners.
Combining these two kinds of accounts and using social identity concepts analytically will help us understand how protests developed into collective violence and how they spread across cities, regions and the country, in a new framework that can be applied in the future to other waves of disturbances.
Historical analysis of the Bristol riot has led to two principal narratives; the first characterises the event as the criminal actions of a mindless, irrational, drunken 'mob', and the second as a reform protest. However, neither of these accounts satisfactorily explains how the protest developed into collective violence on such a scale nor how the agenda of the rioters, reflected in their choice of targets, changed over three days. Equally, the spread of the 'reform riots' across the country remains largely unexplained. What were the relationships between these events and Bristol?
The proposed research breaks new ground for historians in that it will be carried out using concepts and principles from social psychology, where social identity researchers have had success in explaining the limits of behaviour in rioting crowds; the role of authorities in the dynamics of such riots; and the process through which rioting spreads across different geographical locations. Sharing social identity allows a crowd to act as one and also specifies what counts as appropriate behaviour, through the notion of a group norm. Since social identities are based on relationships with other groups, when these relationships change so do social identities - including group norms and ability to take collective action. This social identity approach can therefore help explain the escalation of crowd events into conflict and the spread of disorder; why some groups join in with a wave of rioting but others do not.
The social identity approach has not, hitherto, been applied to disturbances in the late-modern period (1750-1900), which is one aim of the present project. In addition, we will critically evaluate our research and analysis in order to create a user-friendly procedure for historians and others applying social identity concepts to analyse similar late-modern disturbances.
The research involves collecting evidence about all of the reform related disturbances in October 1831 in order to produce triangulated accounts of each event. Of particular interest would be the actions of the crowds and the authorities. For example, how participants gained information about previous disturbances in the wave of unrest, why, how and where the crowd assembled, how leadership emerged and what targets were selected for action. Similarly, we are interested in how the authorities behaved, whether they were aware in advance of the event, how they reacted before and during the disturbance and what kind of coercion (if any) was used to deal with the disorder. The research will then focus on the mentalities and feelings of the participants. Of particular import will be sources of evidence that explicate the motivations of crowd members; how they reacted to information about reform protests; their perceptions of legitimacy; and how they understood themselves and their 'opposition' as social groups. The kinds of evidence required range from eye-witness accounts of what crowds were discussing, chanting or heckling, to memoirs, and visual and material sources such as hand-bills, posters and banners.
Combining these two kinds of accounts and using social identity concepts analytically will help us understand how protests developed into collective violence and how they spread across cities, regions and the country, in a new framework that can be applied in the future to other waves of disturbances.
Planned Impact
Public understanding and discourse
A recent study of perceptions of the urban disturbances in England in August 2011 has demonstrated that discredited theories of crowd behaviour retain considerable traction amongst the general public. Concepts such as deindividuation, 'mob mentality' and irrational, epidemic-like 'contagion' were found to be common in the public understanding of 'riots' (Goodman, Price and Venables, 2014). Outmoded views of contemporary collective protest and violence also dictate how members of the public understand disturbances and their spread in an historic context. This project will challenge these commonly-held assumptions by explicating the processes by which protest events in October 1831 developed into collective violence, understanding the meaning of crowd behaviour through examining targeting and self-imposed limits to actions, and by understanding the spread of disturbances through the use of social identity models. In so doing we will provide a space for less pathologizing, alternative discourses concerning historical incidents of 'riot' to emerge and develop in the public domain. Our work will therefore contribute towards a more informed public discussion of the roots and patterns of collective disorder in October 1831, in the late-modern period as a whole, and in general.
Institutions and groups
The project partner Bristol City Council manages one of the most popular institutions in the city, the social history museum M Shed, with over 500,000 visits per year. M Shed will benefit directly as the project will deliver a major part of the funding for significantly expanding and enhancing their current exhibition covering the 1831 reform riot. The new exhibition will be based on the project outputs and will thus provide a significant legacy for the research in the public domain. M Shed will also be the venue for a public conference and other engagement events. Other collaborators with the project in the West and Southwest include local history groups, museums, heritage centres and archives. A series of five 'county-hub' locations have been designated which will act as focal points for research into the reform disturbances in that particular county. The following institutions have formally agreed to participate in the project: Shire Hall Historic Courthouse Museum (Dorchester, Dorset), Somerset Heritage Centre (Taunton), Newport Museum and Art Gallery (Gwent), Bath Record Office (North Somerset) and the Worcestershire Archive (Worcester). These institutions will host research workshops to which local historians and history groups will be invited to disseminate their local knowledge of archival sources, urban geography and family history during the research phase. The county-hubs will also provide venues for a travelling display and history talks and walks. The various exhibitions and public events will be complemented by four located audio mobile phone applications, aimed at explicating disturbances in locations not otherwise served by public events or exhibitions, or in which disturbances have previously received little public attention: Blandford and Sherborne (Dorset), Yeovil (Somerset) and Worcester. Along with the web-based resources, they will allow the wider public to engage with the findings of the project, extending its impact long after its formal closure.
The public engagement events, travelling display and phone apps will provide incentives for local residents, school age students and tourists to visit the county-hub institutions and the four disturbance locations. The heritage industry in these institutions and locales will benefit from greater footfall and the local communities from secondary economic effects as a result of these interventions. Public engagement through these means will aid in the propagation of new understandings of how waves of protest escalate and spread whilst locating them within the historical context of the widening of the democratic franchise.
A recent study of perceptions of the urban disturbances in England in August 2011 has demonstrated that discredited theories of crowd behaviour retain considerable traction amongst the general public. Concepts such as deindividuation, 'mob mentality' and irrational, epidemic-like 'contagion' were found to be common in the public understanding of 'riots' (Goodman, Price and Venables, 2014). Outmoded views of contemporary collective protest and violence also dictate how members of the public understand disturbances and their spread in an historic context. This project will challenge these commonly-held assumptions by explicating the processes by which protest events in October 1831 developed into collective violence, understanding the meaning of crowd behaviour through examining targeting and self-imposed limits to actions, and by understanding the spread of disturbances through the use of social identity models. In so doing we will provide a space for less pathologizing, alternative discourses concerning historical incidents of 'riot' to emerge and develop in the public domain. Our work will therefore contribute towards a more informed public discussion of the roots and patterns of collective disorder in October 1831, in the late-modern period as a whole, and in general.
Institutions and groups
The project partner Bristol City Council manages one of the most popular institutions in the city, the social history museum M Shed, with over 500,000 visits per year. M Shed will benefit directly as the project will deliver a major part of the funding for significantly expanding and enhancing their current exhibition covering the 1831 reform riot. The new exhibition will be based on the project outputs and will thus provide a significant legacy for the research in the public domain. M Shed will also be the venue for a public conference and other engagement events. Other collaborators with the project in the West and Southwest include local history groups, museums, heritage centres and archives. A series of five 'county-hub' locations have been designated which will act as focal points for research into the reform disturbances in that particular county. The following institutions have formally agreed to participate in the project: Shire Hall Historic Courthouse Museum (Dorchester, Dorset), Somerset Heritage Centre (Taunton), Newport Museum and Art Gallery (Gwent), Bath Record Office (North Somerset) and the Worcestershire Archive (Worcester). These institutions will host research workshops to which local historians and history groups will be invited to disseminate their local knowledge of archival sources, urban geography and family history during the research phase. The county-hubs will also provide venues for a travelling display and history talks and walks. The various exhibitions and public events will be complemented by four located audio mobile phone applications, aimed at explicating disturbances in locations not otherwise served by public events or exhibitions, or in which disturbances have previously received little public attention: Blandford and Sherborne (Dorset), Yeovil (Somerset) and Worcester. Along with the web-based resources, they will allow the wider public to engage with the findings of the project, extending its impact long after its formal closure.
The public engagement events, travelling display and phone apps will provide incentives for local residents, school age students and tourists to visit the county-hub institutions and the four disturbance locations. The heritage industry in these institutions and locales will benefit from greater footfall and the local communities from secondary economic effects as a result of these interventions. Public engagement through these means will aid in the propagation of new understandings of how waves of protest escalate and spread whilst locating them within the historical context of the widening of the democratic franchise.
Title | Survey of reform related riots, disturbances and protests in Britain and Ireland October - December 1831 |
Description | The dataset is consists of a detailed survey of more than 150 online newspapers for Britain and Ireland in the period October - December 1831. The data collected has details of reform-related protests and riots in the period, including accurate dates, durations, estimates of crowd size and composition, interventions by the authorities and several other features. The current dataset includes 461 events and has been shown by comparison with two other similar datasets (Tilly-Horn and Taritelli) to be more comprehensive. |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2021 |
Provided To Others? | No |
Impact | Once this data is complete, it will be a unique database and made available for open access. It will provide a useful resource for local historians, students and academics. |
Title | What do you know about crowds and riots? The 1831 survey |
Description | A public survey of attitudes to crowds and collective violence was developed by the project in order to judge the prevalence amongst the public of outmoded concepts of crowd behaviour and to measure impact through changing perceptions following public engagement activities by the project. Part 1 of the survey was approved by the University of West of England ethics committee and launched using Qualtrics software in 2021. Part 2, aimed at gathering information after the impact of the project, is planned for 2023. |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2021 |
Provided To Others? | No |
Impact | Part 1 of the survey provides information about public knowledge of reform riots in 1831 and current attitudes to crowds and riots. However, comparative results cannot be ascertained until Part 2 of the survey has run in 2023. |
URL | https://uwe.eu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_09688PnAoNDfxUq |
Description | Research Hub 1 - Somerset - South West Heritage Trust |
Organisation | South West Heritage Trust |
Department | Devon Heritage Centre |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
PI Contribution | The collaboration has involved the project team in: 1. facilitating research into local reform-related riots in 1831 in the archives 2. introducing the practioners (archivists, curators) to the interdisciplinary nature and concepts of the project (history, social psychology) 3. organising and leading research workshops at the hub related to the reform riots in that county 4. proposing narratives from the research as exhibition or schools material for the hub to employ in the future |
Collaborator Contribution | The collaboration has involved the partners in: 1. sharing their specific knowledge concerning the archival material to aid the project research 2. sharing their networks of local contacts to aid the research and promote the project 3. facilitating the project research workshops in the hub or elsewhere 4. promoting and disseminating our public survey of attitudes to crowds and riots |
Impact | South West Heritage Trust facilitated a research workshop in Taunton in 2021, which was later switched to a field trip with a local historian in Yeovil. They also promoted the project and disseminated our public survey of attitudes to crowds and riots. The collaboration is multi-disciplinary in that it engages the collaborator with both historical and social psychological techniques and concepts for research and analysis. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | Beyond Contagion - podcasts |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press) |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | The ESRC funded project 'Beyond contagion: Social identity processes in involuntary social influence' (ES/N01068X/1, 2016-2019) used social-psychological concepts to understand how riots devloped and spread using the August 2011disturbances in England as a series of case studies. Three podcasts were produced in 2021 which brought together the leading academics in the Beyond Contagion project to discuss the nature and findings of the research. Part 3 of the series of podcasts discussed in detail two research projects that were a consequence of the Beyond Contagion work, including 'Intergroup dynamics within the 1831 reform riots'. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021,2022 |
URL | https://anchor.fm/nick8522/episodes/Beyond-Contagion---Episode-3-e16jia9 |
Description | Dorset Research Workshop #1 - Blandford |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | This research workshop was held in Shire Hall Historic Court-house Museum on 16 October 2021. The workshop introduced the participants to the social-psychological concepts for understanding how collective violence develops and spreads. A case study of a reform-related riot in Blandford in October 1831 was examined through interogating primary source material with the participants. As a result of this meeting Blandford Museum requested history talk and walk and added us to their website as a partner, keen to develop the Blandford case study with us. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
URL | https://riot1831.com/2021/08/public-research-workshop/ |
Description | Dorset Research Workshop #2 - Sherborne |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | This online research workshop was the result of a request from particpants in the first research workshop held in Shire Hall Historic Court-house Museum in October 2021. Held on 25 November 2021 the workshop considered the case study of a reform-related riot in Sherborne in October 1831, through interogating primary source material with the participants. As a result of this workshop contacts were made with local historians in Sherborne and Sherborne Museum asked the project to provide a public history talk in October 2022. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
URL | https://riot1831.com/2021/12/report-research-workshops-in-dorset-and-somerset/?preview_id=968&previe... |
Description | Online public lecture: The St Paul's riots: From 'mindless mob' to 'conscious crowd'. |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | This was a public lecture given on behalf of the UWE Regional History Centre as part of a series of events at the social history museum M Shed in Bristol in October 2020. Although the lecture was focused on the St Paul's riot of 1980 it involved introducing social psychological concepts concerned with crowds and riots to the general public. These concepts are essential to the research and analysis in the current project. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
URL | https://www.bristolmuseums.org.uk/m-shed/whats-on/the-st-pauls-riots-from-mindless-mob-to-conscious-... |
Description | Public Research Workshop in Somerset |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Our planned south Somerset research workshop in Taunton was reorganised to take place in Yeovil, the site of our chosen reform-related riot case study. Through the publicity we were able to organise both a meeting with a knowledgable local historian and a guided field trip. As a consequence of this the local historian has contributed significant information and knowledge to our project, as well as updating his voluminous local history website. This fruitful relationship continues. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
URL | https://riot1831.com/2021/12/report-research-workshops-in-dorset-and-somerset/ |
Description | Riot 1831 website |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | The Riot 1831 website was launched in 2021 to provide a medium for disseminating the following information: 1. The content and aims of the 'Intergroup dynamics within the 1831 reform riots: towards a new social psycho-history' project and in particular its inter-disciplinary nature. 2. To publicise events and exhibitions organised by the project and others of interest. 3. To provide contextual information about the reform-related riots of 1831. 4. To provide through an interactive map details of the exetent and locatuion of disturbances. 5. To publicise the findings of the project in an accessible manner. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021,2022 |
URL | https://riot1831.com/ |