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William Tabb Paperback English

Sentenced to Hang

Memoirs of Billy Hands 1768-1853

By Tony Rail

Regular price £14.99 £12.74 Save 15%
Unit price
per
15% off

William Tabb Paperback English

Sentenced to Hang

Memoirs of Billy Hands 1768-1853

By Tony Rail

Regular price £14.99 £12.74 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
Dispatched Monday, 8th June with Tracked Delivery - free when you spend over £15
Delivery expected between Wednesday, 10th June and Thursday, 11th June
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  • The early 1790s were a turbulent period in an increasingly dividedEngland, nowhere more so than in Birmingham, where a strengthening Republicanthreat inevitably prompted a desperate Anglican and Tory backlash. As ayoung Birmingham metal-worker who was there, Billy gives a vivid first-handaccount of the part he and his friends played in the Birmingham Riots of 1791,and the resulting trials which attracted the attention of the whole country. Through Billy's eyes the reader comes to understand the social and politicalunrest of those turbulent times. Billy Hands describes his life as a common butwell-respected metal-worker. Billy wasalso invited to be a free or servitorial member of a remarkably egalitariangentlemen's Birmingham Athletic Society. When some of the gentlemen members were developing plans for someanti-Republican riots, Billy heard and understood the gentlemen's reasons. Thus, Billy's story provides an importantinsight into public disorder in England that still applies to this day.
The early 1790s were a turbulent period in an increasingly dividedEngland, nowhere more so than in Birmingham, where a strengthening Republicanthreat inevitably prompted a desperate Anglican and Tory backlash. As ayoung Birmingham metal-worker who was there, Billy gives a vivid first-handaccount of the part he and his friends played in the Birmingham Riots of 1791,and the resulting trials which attracted the attention of the whole country. Through Billy's eyes the reader comes to understand the social and politicalunrest of those turbulent times. Billy Hands describes his life as a common butwell-respected metal-worker. Billy wasalso invited to be a free or servitorial member of a remarkably egalitariangentlemen's Birmingham Athletic Society. When some of the gentlemen members were developing plans for someanti-Republican riots, Billy heard and understood the gentlemen's reasons. Thus, Billy's story provides an importantinsight into public disorder in England that still applies to this day.