Richard Cobden - Stockport, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member dtrebilc
N 53° 24.550 W 002° 09.586
30U E 555852 N 5918117
This bronze statue to commemorate Richard Cobden, a former MP for Stockport, was erected in 1887.
Waymark Code: WMQ9CC
Location: North West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 01/15/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Dorcadion Team
Views: 3

Richard Cobden was a great believer in Free Trade and was one of the main campaigners for the repeal of the Corn Laws after becoming the MP for Stockport in 1841.

The statue is one and a half times life size and stands on a granite plinth. It was sculpted by George G. Adams SC in London and shows him in period costume, wearing a frock coat. He is standing in an orator's pose with a rolled manuscript in his left hand.

Next to his right leg his a small column with a carving of a corn sheaf. It also has a date of 1846, the year that the corn laws against which he had campaigned were repealed.

It stands near to St. Peter's Church and in 2007 moved slightly when St. Peter's Square was redeveloped. When the statue was removed various items were found underneath it including A copy of the Stockport Advertiser and the Cheshire County News, a poster announcing the unveiling of the statue by Cobden's daughter and two half pennies, dated 1886. link

This website has more information about Cobden.

"Richard Cobden was born in 1804 into a farming family at Heyshott in West Sussex . In 1814 his father had to sell the farm and Richard, the fourth of eleven children, was sent to a school in Yorkshire which he described as "Dotheboys Hall" in reality. In 1819 Cobden went to work in his uncle's warehouse in London where he proved to be an adept clerk and salesman.

In 1828 he and two friends went into partnership to sell calico in London; in 1831 they opened a calico-printing works in Lancashire. In 1832 Cobden settled in Manchester but went on to visit America and the Levant. Consequently he published England, Ireland and America in 1835 and Russia in 1836. In them he preached free trade and economic non-intervention by the government.

In 1837 he stood as a parliamentary candidate for Stockport on a free trade platform but was unsuccessful. In 1838 he became one of the seven founding members of the Anti-Corn-Law League in Manchester. He conducted lecture tours all over England and he became an MP for Stockport in 1841. His parliamentary speeches were clear, quiet, and persuasive. He was the only man ever to beat Peel in debate in parliament and in 1846 Peel acknowledged Cobden's rule in the repeal of the Corn Laws.

He refused to merge the ACLL with wider programmes of reform because he saw the advantages of a single policy, and saw the appeal to new industrial areas. He was so committed to the cause of free trade that he became bankrupt. A public subscription of £80,000 was raised in recognition of his services, and in 1847 he used the money to buy back his childhood home and farm.

Cobden did not hold Cabinet office although in 1860 he was responsible for arranging a commercial treaty with France. He spoke out strongly in favour of the north during the American Civil War. Cobden died in 1865".
URL of the statue: [Web Link]

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