Society of Gentlemen Supporters of the Bill of Rights

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Society_of_Gentlemen_Supporters_of_the_Bill_of_Rights an entity of type: Thing

The Society of Gentlemen Supporters of the Bill of Rights was a British pressure group formed on 20 February 1769 to support John Wilkes after he was expelled from the House of Commons. The Society was formed at the London Tavern in Bishopsgate in London. The lawyer John Glynn was elected as chairman. The members believed George III was using the royal prerogative to invade the rights of electors to elect their representatives. They were named after the Bill of Rights 1689 which placed limits on the power of the monarch. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Society of Gentlemen Supporters of the Bill of Rights
rdf:langString Society of Gentlemen Supporters of the Bill of Rights
rdf:langString Society of Gentlemen Supporters of the Bill of Rights
xsd:integer 46596862
xsd:integer 1095759576
rdf:langString A portrait of John Glynn, John Wilkes and John Horne Tooke.
rdf:langString red
rdf:langString United Kingdom
xsd:date 1769-02-20
rdf:langString John Glynn, John Wilkes and John Horne Tooke by Richard Houston.jpg
xsd:integer 400
rdf:langString Robert Morris
rdf:langString The Society of Gentlemen Supporters of the Bill of Rights was a British pressure group formed on 20 February 1769 to support John Wilkes after he was expelled from the House of Commons. The Society was formed at the London Tavern in Bishopsgate in London. The lawyer John Glynn was elected as chairman. The members believed George III was using the royal prerogative to invade the rights of electors to elect their representatives. They were named after the Bill of Rights 1689 which placed limits on the power of the monarch. In order to enable Wilkes to continue campaigning, the Society wanted to pay off Wilkes' debts. The preamble to the Society's charter read: "Whereas John Wilkes, Esq., has suffered very greatly in his private fortune, from the severe and repeated persecutions he has undergone in behalf of the public, and as it seems reasonable to us, that the man who suffers for the public good, should be supported by the public". John Horne Tooke argued that the Society should send money to printers who had been jailed for printing tracts supporting liberty. Wilkes, seeing this as a diversion from paying off his debts, invited his friends to flood the next meeting of the Society to vote against this proposal. On 9 April 1771, the Society split, with Tooke, , James Townsend, John Sawbridge, Glynn and many others forming their own Constitutional Society. This left the Bill of Rights Society under Wilkes' leadership with 63 members, with Wilkes abandoning his attempt to limit the Society's funds for himself alone. On 23 July 1771, the Society published a manifesto calling for annual Parliaments, the exclusion of placemen and pensioners from the House of Commons, outlawing bribery in elections, the "full and equal representation of the people", the abolition of all excise taxes and for America not to be taxed without her consent.
xsd:integer 1769
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4752
xsd:gYear 1776
xsd:date 1769-02-20
xsd:gYear 1769

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