The Nottingham cheese riot, also known as the Great Cheese Riot, started on 2 October 1766 at the city's annual Goose Fair. Coming at a time of food shortages and rising foodstuff prices in England, violence broke out when city residents attempted to prevent Lincolnshire merchants taking away Nottinghamshire cheeses they had bought at the fair. A warehouse, shops and a cargo boat were looted and hundreds of cheese wheels were rolled through the streets by angry rioters. Government troops were deployed when the mayor of Nottingham, Robie Swann, was unable to restore control; one man was killed and several wounded as the military opened fire on the rioters. Order was eventually restored after several days of unrest.
The Nottingham Goose Fair traces its origins back to the feast of Matthew the Apostle, which was first celebrated in Nottingham during the 11th century. Eventually, the feast became a livestock market where geese were traded, and later became associated with horse trading, but by the 18th century it was most closely associated with foodstuffs including cheese, many tons of which were sold at the fair each year. [1] The cheese manufactured in Nottingham at this time was sold in wheels and is believed to have been similar to Red Leicester. [2]
A poor harvest across the country in 1766 led to fears of impending food shortages. [2] In that year's fair, which began on 2 October, there was an abnormally large quantity of cheese for sale at inflated prices. [3] There were recorded prices of 28 to 36 shillings (roughly £140–£180 in modern currency) [4] per hundredweight (112 pounds or 51 kilograms) of cheese, around twice that recorded at Coventry just a week earlier. [3] [5] As a result of food shortages, the English public was anxious to keep foodstuffs in their local area; there were instances of merchants being overpowered and forced to sell their goods at pre-shortage rates. [2]
A riot broke out on 2 October 1766 after several Lincolnshire merchants purchased a large quantity of cheese with the intention of selling it in their county. [nb 1] [9] [2] They were subsequently surrounded by a group of "rude lads" who demanded the merchants not take away the cheese and instead share it out in Nottingham. [2] [3] Violence eventually broke out over the dispute and rioters proceeded to loot a large quantity of cheese throughout Nottingham; shop windows were broken and hundreds of cheese wheels were thrown and rolled down the streets, including in Wheeler Gate and Peck Lane. [9] [5] [10] The mayor of Nottingham, Robie Swann, attempted to disrupt the riot and restore order, but was knocked over by a rolling cheese wheel. [5] [11]
Some locals armed themselves and set up roadblocks on the city streets to prevent merchants from carrying away cheeses. [2] A cargo boat near Trent Bridge was seized and all cheese held onboard was looted, despite its owner offering to pay the crowd or to sell his wares at a low cost. [3] [12] One warehouse was attacked and, though its defenders eventually drove the crowd off with firearms, some of the cheese stored within was looted as well. The warehouse's owner organized a mounted posse to track down the cheese, which had been taken to Castle Donington. The local magistrate refused to sign search warrants for houses in the village. In response, the posse detained several local residents on suspicion of rioting and beat them at the gates of the magistrates' house, demanding justice. The posse was eventually driven away by a mob of women and children throwing stones and withdrew, the cheese having been lost. [12]
In Nottingham, the authorities requested military support to help restore order. The city was at the time a garrison town and the British Army's 1st Regiment of Light Dragoons along with infantry and cavalry of the Nottinghamshire Militia were deployed to suppress the riots. [9] [5] Troops fired into the rioting crowds, injuring several and killing one, William Eggleston of Car Colston, who was standing near a pile of cheese. [9] Eggleston was a farmer and it appears he was killed while protecting his own wares, having been mistaken for a looter. [2] Several people were detained and brought before magistrates in a private residence but were freed after the house was attacked by rioters, who gained access to the building by smashed its windows. [3] [5] The unrest continued overnight. [2]
Violence continued in Nottingham for several days until the military restored order. For a while, wagons carrying cheese were formed into convoys and provided with an armed escort. [12] A local newspaper, the Leicester and Nottingham Journal, accused the rioters of having caused a cheese shortage in the city. [3] There were other riots in England in late 1766 caused by foodstuff shortages and increasing food prices. The disorder was particularly severe in Devon and Cornwall but there were also serious outbreaks in Gloucester, Bristol, Derby, Birmingham and Norwich; South East England, however, was largely quiet. [13] The 250th anniversary of the riot was marked in 2016 by the Lord Mayor of Nottingham, Mohammed Saghir, in conjunction with a local cheese shop. [14]
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The 1831 Bristol riots took place on 29–31 October 1831 and were part of the 1831 reform riots in England. The riots arose after the second Reform Bill was voted down in the House of Lords, stalling efforts at electoral reform. The arrival of the anti-reform judge Charles Wetherell in the city on 29 October led to a protest, which degenerated into a riot. The civic and military authorities were poorly focused and uncoordinated and lost control of the city. Order was restored on the third day by a combination of a posse comitatus of the city's middle-class citizens and military forces.
The 1766 food riots took place across England in response to rises in the prices of wheat and other cereals following a series of poor harvests. Riots were sparked by the first largescale exports of grain in August and peaked in September–October. Around 131 riots were recorded, though many were relatively non-violent. In many cases traders and farmers were forced by the rioters to sell their wares at lower rates. In some instances, violence occurred with shops and warehouses looted and mills destroyed. There were riots in many towns and villages across the country but particularly in the South West and the Midlands, which included the Nottingham cheese riot.