BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE BESIDES the private papers mentioned in the Preface, the following authorities throw light on the passing of the Reform Bill. This list is not meant to be complete, and in particular it does not cover the ground of the first and third chapters--that is to say, the Reform movement before 1830 and the social condition of England. I. MS. SOURCES | | In the Public Record Office: | | Home Office Papers, under the following headings: Disturb- ances, Domestic, Municipal and Provincial, Scotland, Ireland. These are in bundles, and there is no means of referring to an individual document. | | | Home Office Entry Books, under the same headings. War Office Papers. | | | | In the British Museum: | | Correspondence of Sir Robert Wilson, chiefly with leading Whigs. | | | Correspondence of Lord Broughton; very little, however, of importance for 1830-32 is to be found. | | | Place MSS.; of unique importance for the history of the move- ment outside Parliament. Place wrote his History of the Reform Agitation between 1836 and 1839; valuable ex- tracts are given in his Life by Graham Wallas, chapters ix.-xi. | | | Political Caricatures of 1830-32, and Cartoons by Richard Doyle. | | II. PUBLISHED CORRESPONDENCE, &C. Creevey, T. Papers. 3rd ed. 1905. Croker, J. W. Correspondence and Diary. Vol. ii. 1884. Grey, Charles, Earl. Correspondence with King William IV and Sir Herbert Taylor. 2 vols. 1867. ----- Correspondence with Princess Lieven Vols. i., ii. 1890. Hansard. Parliamentary Debates (3rd Series). Vols. i-xii. Melbourne, Viscount. Papers. 1889. Peel, Sir R. Papers. Vol. ii. 1899. Russell, Lord J. Early Correspondence. 2 vols. 1913. -427- |