Sheffield Troublemakers Sheffield Troublemakers
Rebels and Radicals in Sheffield History
'This book gives a most comprehensive record of the rise of Chartism in Sheffield and in particular, the Sheffield people involved ...'

'... engrossing book.'

Joan Flett, Edge - Nether Edge Neighbourhood Group Newsletter.

'A new book traces and celebrates Sheffield's rich history as a hotbed of radical agitators.'

'To be described as a city of troublemakers might sound somewhat insulting but the sense in which it is applied to Sheffield in a new book is more likely a source of pride. Sheffield Troublemakers chronicles the rebels and radicals over nearly 200 years of the city's history.'

Ian Soutar, Sheffield Weekly Telegraph.


George III described Sheffield as a 'damned bad place' at a time when the town was notorious for radical agitation. This book traces this radical tradition right up to the 1980s, when David Blunkett's Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire fought Mrs Thatcher. The book tells of dramatic events - the burning of the vicar's Broomhall residence, Samuel Holberry's attempted Chartist uprising, the 'Sheffield outrages' of the 1860s, John Ruskin's Communist experiment in Totley, the Sheffield mass trespass and the raising of the red flag over the town hall in 1981

There are colourful personalities, such as Joseph Gales, a brilliant newspaper editor who fled to America; Mary Anne Rawson, an impassioned anti-slavery campaigner; John Arthur Roebuck, a radical MP who brought down the government; Edward Carpenter, a socialist prophet and gay pioneer; Father Ommanney, whose ritualism outraged Protestants, J.T. Murphy, who fraternised with Lenin and Stalin; and Ethel Haythornthwaite, who fought to save the countryside.

The book is valuable historically in describing the important part played in Britain's radical history by this great Northern city, with its dissenting middle classes, its independent-minded artisans, its championship of the weak against the strong and its unwillingness to be pushed around.