NORTHERN HISTORY

The challenge of cholera: the last epidemic at Newcastle upon Tyne
Calcott M
Epidemics in Tudor York
Palliser DM
Direct farming on the estates of Cheshire landowners, c. 1570-c. 1700
Wanklyn M
Mortality and economic change in the diocese of York, 1390-1514
Goldberg PJ
The justices and the Prison Act, 1877: the example of Wakefield
Harrison JF
Britishness, asylum-seekers and the northern working class: 1851
Belchem J
The arrival of a small group of Polish-Hungarian refugees in Liverpool in 1851 reveals a lot about contemporary political views in the United Kingdom. The refugees were members of General Wysocki's Polish legion, which had fought Russia and Austria during the Hungarian revolution in 1848-49. While British liberals had hailed the nationalist cause from a distance, they were made uneasy by the presence of the refugee republicans with radical ideas. For that reason, British liberals worked with the government to try to send the Hungarian refugees to the United States. On the other hand, tradesmen and artisans in Liverpool - who were drawn to the social democratic ideas of liberty expressed by the revolutionaries of 1848 - organized a successful campaign to grant the refugees asylum.
The cattle plague in Cheshire, 1865-1866
Matthews S
The emergence of the Liverpool raw cotton market, 1800-1850
Hall N
Charity, politics, and the establishment of York County Hospital: a "party job"?
Wallis P