At the time of the 1841 Census, England was passing through a period of rapid and radical change,
from being a country with a primarily agricultural economy to becoming the first modern industrial
state. In the previous forty years there had been immense advances in industrial techniques and
inventions which enabled Britain to become the workshop of the world, and for a few decades the
foremost industrial power.
The country had survived the period of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars without any
serious civil disturbance. During the first forty years of the 19th century there had been a series of
legislative and administrative reforms.
In 1828 the Catholic Emancipation Act freed Roman Catholics from the restrictions placed upon them.
In 1829 Sir Robert Peel set up the Metropolitan Police Force and a proper constabulary was gradually
introduced all over the country, creating a framework for law and order.
In 1832 the Great Reform Bill rationalised Parliamentary representation, swept away the
“pocket boroughs” and extended the franchise to many freeholders and the larger tenant farmers in
the counties.
In 1834 central Registration of Births Deaths and Marriages was introduced, enabling proper statistics
of the population to be prepared, and in 1836 Local Government was reformed.
Apart from these the greatest change lay in the realm of transport. The building of canals had
enabled coal and agricultural produce to reach centres of population, but an even greater change was
the building of the modern railway system, carrying both goods and passengers. The pioneer was the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway, opened in 1830. In 1832 a railway reached Leicester, but the
Midland Railway did not reach Oakham until 1848, (after buying and closing the Oakham Canal) so that
in 1841 the nearest railway to Oakham would still be at Leicester, and Rutland was still in the age of
the horse.
The early 1830’s had been a time of good harvests, but from 1836 agricultural areas were hard hit by
poor harvests, and by 1837 there was a severe trade depression which lasted till 1842. In that year
there were disturbances known as the ‘plug riots’ in the Lancashire and Yorkshire textile
manufacturing towns in protest against the lowering of wages by factory owners and the poverty of
the handloom weavers. The recovery of trade in the following year saved the country from further
serious disorder. The movement known as Chartism appeared in 1837 demanding universal male
suffrage, annual parliaments and voting by secret ballot Chartism was to reach its peak in 1848 but
then died away. After the Great Reform Bill the Government made a grant to encourage elementary
education, working through two societies, the (Church of England) National Society and the
(nonconformist) British and Foreign School Society. Even so, in 1841 it was thought that two thirds of
the male population and half the female population were unable even to sign their name.
It was not until the Census of 1851 that the majority of the population became urban dwellers.
London was far and away the largest city, indeed the largest in Europe. In 1841 the population was
said by Henry Mayhew to be made up as follows:
Engaged in trade and manufacture
3,000,000
Engaged in agriculture
1,500,000
Engaged in mining, quarrying and transport
750,000
Domestic servants
1,000,000
Independent persons
500,000
Professional persons
200,000
Army, Navy, Civil servants etc. (Government service)
200,000
Paupers etc.
200,000
Residue (3,500,000 women and 7,500,000 children)
11,000,000
Total population
18,350,000
There seems no information available as to how the trade depression of 1838-42 affected Rutland,
but the Committee of the Oakham Canal Company felt able to spend over a thousand pounds on
improvements to the Oakham wharf in 1841, which suggests a degree of prosperity locally.
Nationally, one very hopeful feature of the period was the accession to the throne in 1837 of a young,
intelligent and strong minded queen, Victoria, and her marriage in 1840 to Prince Albert.
Together they set the tone for the following half century, and by Prince Albert’s influence it became
the convention that the Crown was strictly non-party and did not take sides in politics.
Langham Village History Group