Society for Constitutional Information

Connections

No connections available.

Timeline

April 1780: The radical John Cartwright founded the Society...

National or international item

April 1780

The radical John Cartwright founded the Society for Constitutional Information , an activist group which worked to promote parliamentary reform.

16 December 1789: The Society for Constitutional Information...

National or international item

16 December 1789

The Society for Constitutional Information (a potentially radical political organization) held its semi-annual meeting at the London Tavern, to commemorate the centenary of the Bill of Rights.

October 1793: A British Convention on manhood suffrage...

National or international item

October 1793

A British Convention on manhood suffrage was held in Edinburgh, bringing together delegates from the LondonCorresponding Society and Scottish delegates of the Society for Constitutional Information .

12 May 1794: Thomas Hardy, founder and secretary of the...

National or international item

12 May 1794

Thomas Hardy , founder and secretary of the LondonCorresponding Society , and Daniel Adams , secretary of the Society for Constitutional Information , were arrested at their homes.

By mid May 1794: The First Report from the Committee of Secrecy...

National or international item

By mid May 1794

The First Report from the Committee of Secrecy was published in London. The Committee was set up to monitor and investigate potentially seditious activities by the Society for Constitutional Information (founded in April 1780)...

September 1794: Indictments against Thomas Hardy, John Horne...

National or international item

September 1794

Indictments against Thomas Hardy , John Horne Tooke , and John Thelwall argued that proposals radically to limit the power of the king should rank as treason.

6 October 1794: A London grand jury found twelve accused...

National or international item

6 October 1794

A London grand jury found twelve accused radicals guilty of high treason. Lord Chief Justice Eyre had delivered them the charge.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.