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Captain Swing was the name appended to some of the threatening letters during the rural English Swing Riots of 1830, when labourers rioted over the introduction of new threshing machines and the loss of their livelihoods. Captain Swing was described as a hard-working tenant farmer driven to destitution and despair by social and political change in the early nineteenth century.
==SwPopular protests by farm workers occurred across a wide swath of agricultural England, from Sussex in the south to Kent in the east,[1] and they had a number of structural causes. The main targets for protesting crowds were landowners/landlords, whose threshing machines they destroyed or dismantled, and whom they petitioned for a rise in wages. They also demanded contributions of food, money, beer, or all three from their victims. Often they sought to enlist local parish officials and occasionally magistrates to raise levels of poor relief as well. Throughout England, 600 rioters were imprisoned, 500 sentenced to transportation, and 19 executed and 9 were hanged.
The protests were notable for their discipline and the customary protocols favoured by the crowds, characteristics which were very much part of the tradition of popular protest going back to the eighteenth century. The structural reasons for the Swing 'riots' (or risings) are relatively straightforward: underemployment, low wages, low levels of relief, and competition for winter employment from machinery. However, the nature of the events of 1830 suggest that they may demand just as subtle an interpretation as the events of the previous century.
For most contemporaries, the riotous but largely bloodless actions of the crowds presented less cause for alarm than the high incidence of arson during the period of Swing (October to December 1830). Swing the rick burner was not only more destructive, but infinitely harder to apprehend than the rioters in this heightened atmosphere of tension and hostility. The relationship between arsonists and protesters is difficult to assess – although there is little doubt that a relationship existed. Whatever the immediate motivations of the arsonists of 1830 and 1831, their actions undoubtedly gave added strength to the demands of the protesting crowds.
However, reform was in the air. Many protestors found sympathy in middle-class radicals who encouraged protesters to spread far from their original sources. Further, early sentences by magistrates against the rioters, even those who destroyed threshing machines, were fairly light. Thus, riots continued into 1831.
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Sir, Your name is down amongst the Black hearts in the Black Book and this is to advise you and the like of you, who are Parson Justasses, to make your wills. Ye have been the Blackguard Enemies of the People on all occasions, Ye have not yet done as ye ought,.... Swing
Sir, This is to acquaint you that if your thrashing machines are not destroyed by you directly we shall commence our labours. Signed on behalf of the whole ... Swing From E.J. Hobsbawm and George Rude, Captain Swing [2]
Swing appears as a real person in the alternate reality fiction The Difference Engine.
Captain Swing (1965) is a play for schools, set at the time of the Bristol Riots (1831). The play represents the emotions and the types of people involved in the riots and their climax which occur in any revolution — the realist and the idealist; the pacifist and the militant; the honest and the phoney; and the martyrdom and suffering of the comparatively innocent.
Matthew Dinely, the central tragic figure, is a radical schoolmaster who tries and fails to control the violence of the mob, who are protesting against the failure of yet another attempt at reform of the corrupt political process at a time when a hard-pressed working class, over-worked, ill-housed, and "starving in the midst of plenty", pinned too much hope on the magical banner of Reform. The plot portrays the dilemma of a man who owes allegiance to a cause, but cannot believe that his adversary is evil, or beyond the reach of reasoned argument. The adversary is Lt. Colonel Devoran, a military man who cannot bring himself to use force against people already repressed. In the background is the eponymous but unseen Swing ("he always goes invisible, does Captain Swing"), who leads the mob to rioting.
Captain Swing is a mixed genre album by American folk singer-songwriter Michelle Shocked. It was first released by Mercury Records in 1989 and later reissued by Shocked's own label Mighty Sound in 2004. It was named after Captain Swing, the pseudonymous rebel leader who penned threatening letters during the rural English Swing Riots of 1830. The album was a cross-country inventory of swing musical styles -- from Dixieland to Western, Big Band to BeBop.
All tracks composed by Michelle Shocked; except where indicated
If she had it to do
All over again
It would be a photograph
She would have a wide grin
But no, it was an artist
With a longing, loving style
So when the paint was dry
All that remained was a
Faint strange smile
She's ripe with broken dreams
Her lovers never stay
It looks like Mona Lisa
Is having a bad day
Mona Lisa is having a bad day
"The Book Of History
Has many missing pages"
Murmurs the Madonna
Of the Middle Ages
But in between her cracks
You can read between the lines
She'd love nothing better than
To rob the Louvre blind
Baroque and complicated
Her lovers never stay
It looks like Mona Lisa
Is having a bad day
Mona Lisa is having a bad day
So please, just go away
Just go away, just go away