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Historical background to the Riot

Programme of Events: 19th June 2004

Project Team

What was the Militia?

Recreating the Hexham Riot of 1761

Hexham Riot Song

Hexham Riot workshops for Schools

Creative Writing

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Historical background to the Riot
Location: Northumberland
Why did the Hexham Riot take place? What were the rioters protesting against? What did they achieve?
The introduction of the Militia Act in 1757 generated some resistance, but agitation had become more organised by the time of the 1761 round of balloting.
In Durham and Northumberland, at Gateshead, Morpeth, Belford and elsewhere, crowds armed with improvised weapons threatened the magistrates when they gathered to conduct the ballot. In each case, the ballot was abandoned and the parish lists were burned by the rioters. At Hexham, the authorities were determined to enforce the ballot.
The magistrates called for the assistance of 240 men of the North Yorkshire Militia, who were stationed at that time at Newcastle. These men were coming to the end of their three years’ service in the militia. Their backgrounds as craftsmen and agricultural workers in rural communities would have been very similar to those of the agitators they were to face. Some 5,000 protestors marched into Hexham from the surrounding district. The militia were drawn up in the Market Place, in front of the Sessions Hall (now known as the Moot Hall) where the magistrates were to conduct the ballot.
For several hours, the angry crowd faced the nervous militia soldiers. Eventually, the situation became so tense that the Riot Act was read and the protestors were ordered to disperse.
This served to make matters worse and two shots were fired out of the crowd. An officer who was attempting to calm the situation was fatally wounded and a militia soldier fell dead. The militia returned fire, killing some 20 of the rioters on the spot. Others died later of their wounds and over 300 were injured.
The casualties included men and women such as John Dodd a shoemaker and David Turnbull a labourer, both from Hexham, Heslip a pitman from Prudhoe, John Brown the blacksmith from Broomhope, Thomas Richardson of Corbridge, married for less than a month, and Thomas Levestone’s wife who was with child.
The protest had failed and balloting for the militia continued throughout the country.
The affair became known as the “Hexham Massacre” and the North Yorkshire Militia gained the notorious nickname the “Hexham Butchers”.
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