
In the early evening of 16 October 1834, to the horror of bystanders, a huge ball of fire exploded through the roof of the Houses of Parliament, creating a blaze so enormous that it could be seen by the King and Queen at Windsor, and from stagecoaches on top of the South Downs. In front of hundreds of thousands of witnesses the great conflagration destroyed Parliament's glorious old buildings and their contents. No one who witnessed the disaster would ever forget it. The events of that October day in 1834 were as shocking and significant to contemporaries as the death of Princess Diana was to us at the end of the 20th century - yet today this national catastrophe is a forgotten disaster, not least because Barry and Pugin's monumental new Palace of Westminster has obliterated all memory of its 800 year-old predecessor. Rumours as to the fire's cause were rife. Was it arson, terrorism, the work of foreign operatives, a kitchen accident, careless builders, or even divine judgement on politicians? In this, the first full-length book on the subject, Parliamentary Archivist Caroline Shenton unfolds the gripping story of the fire over the course of that fateful day and night. In the process, she paints a skilful portrait of the political and social context of the time, including details of the slums of Westminster and the frenzied expansion of the West End; the plight of the London Irish; child labour, sinecures and corruption in high places; fire-fighting techniques and floating engines; the Great Reform Act and the new Poor Law; Captain Swing and arson at York Minster; the parlous state of public buildings and records in the Georgian period; and above all the symbolism which many contemporaries saw in the spectacular fall of a national icon.
What were the immediate causes and the broader socio-political consequences of the 1834 fire that destroyed the historic Houses of Parliament? Caroline Shenton, a former Parliamentary Archivist, utilizes her unique access to primary source records to reconstruct the events of 16 October 1834. She argues that the fire was not merely an accidental disaster but a symbolic event that reflected the tensions, corruption, and rapid social changes of Georgian-era Britain. By examining the aftermath and the subsequent investigation, the author provides a comprehensive account of how this catastrophe reshaped the national identity and the physical landscape of Westminster.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and reviewers praise the work for its meticulous archival research and its ability to contextualize a forgotten disaster within the larger narrative of British political reform. Readers frequently note the accessibility of the prose, which balances academic rigor with a compelling, narrative-driven account of the fire.
Page Count:
349
Publication Date:
2012-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191611786
ISBN-13:
9780191611780
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