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The 1835 Municipal Reform Act is both a consequence and a continuation of the 1832 Reform Act. By dealing with those “citadels of Torysm” that were the municipal corporations, the Whigs not only wanted to confirm their electoral victory, but also to reform the local system that had been largely criticised for decades. Preceding the reform, a thorough investigation was conducted by a group of twenty commissioners – young liberal or radical lawyers – who visited 285 municipal corporations in England and Wales. After public hearings, they wrote, for each borough, a detailed report which provided an accurate picture of the municipal institutions and their functioning over the preceding d...
Everyone knows the Reform Club as the scene of the wager that the world could be circumnavigated In Eighty Days as described in Jules Verne's novel; and countless Londoners and tourists have stood outside the Pall Mall facade of Barry's Grade I listed masterpiece wondering what goes on inside. In a new approach to the arcane world of 'Clubland', this book endeavours to conduct readers on a journey into the real Pall Mall landscape. This is neither conventional narrative history nor a mere tally of anecdotes. Instead, it tells the story of the Club's development through the eyes of its most celebrated occupants. Founded in 1836 as the 'Central Office' of the Liberal party, the Reform existed for less than eighty years as a strictly political club, but whilst it did, it was the centre of Liberal and coalition government making and breaking. This book has chapters on the Liberal Prime Ministers, such as Palmerston, Asquith and Lloyd George ..."
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