Round & Roundabout - Satellite Oddity - Oakdale, Sirhowy Valley, Wales.
N 51° 40.386 W 003° 11.372
30U E 486893 N 5724697
An imposing & impressive sculpture of a Giant Man. The 25 feet tall 'Chartist Man' featured on Virtual Globetrotting the Satellite Oddity Website. Made entirely of small Round flat washers, & located on a vehicle Roundabout, at Oakdale, South Wales
Waymark Code: WMRW61
Location: South Wales, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 08/11/2016
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The Sculpture is called 'Chartist Man' sculpted by artist Sebastien Boyesen, and placed in March 2005.
The 25 feet tall Chartist Man is made of thousands of stainless steel flat washers welded together. This was intended to show there is strength in numbers. The washers can clearly be seen in the close up of his right foot shown in the listing gallery. The Sculpture stands in the centre of a roundabout, at Oakdale a small Sirhowy Valley town in Wales.
"The Chartist were a group of Welshmen campaigning to get the vote for all men.
On the 4th November 1839 thousands of men marched into Newport opposing the ‘tyranny’ of a Parliament elected by fewer than a tenth of the male population. Angry at the rejection of the People’s Charter calling for universal male suffrage, secret voting, equal electoral districts, annual Parliaments, salaries for MPs and the removal of the property qualification for MPs, they came armed with sticks, pikes and guns. At the Westgate Hotel, soldiers fired at the crowd and 22 men died. Three of the leaders, John Frost, Zephaniah Williams and William Jones, were convicted of treason and exiled in Tasmania.
This defeat set the Chartist movement back, but the campaign to get the vote for all men continued, spread, & grew, throughout Britain. Two further unsuccessful petitions in 1842 and 1848 were signed by millions. Agitation continued and popular pressure led to the extension of the vote to a third of all adult males (1867) and the introduction of secret voting (1872).
In 1918, all men over 21 gained the right to vote, as did women over 30, but equal voting rights for women were not attained until 1928."
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