Lord George Gordon
Lord George Gordon (26 December 1751 – 1 November 1793) was a British politician best known for lending his name to the Gordon Riots of 1780.
An eccentric and flighty personality, he was born into the Scottish nobility and sat in the House of Commons from 1774 to 1780. His life ended after a number of controversies, notably one surrounding his conversion to Judaism, for which he was ostracised. He died in Newgate Prison.[1]
Early life
George Gordon was born in London, England, third and youngest son of
Parliamentary career
At the
His chances of building a political following in parliament were damaged by his inconsistency and his tendency to criticise all the major political factions. He was just as likely to attack the radical opposition spokesman
The Gordon Riots
In 1779 he organised, and made himself head of, the Protestant Association, formed to secure the repeal of the Papists Act 1778, which had restored limited civil rights to Roman Catholics willing to swear certain oaths of loyalty to the Crown.
On 2 June 1780 he headed a crowd of around 50,000 people that marched in procession from
For his role in instigating the riots, Lord George was charged with
Thanks to a strong defence by his cousin,[5] Thomas Erskine, 1st Baron Erskine, he was acquitted on the grounds that he had had no treasonable intent.
Imprisonment
In 1786 he was
Conversion to Judaism
In 1787, at the age of 36, Lord George Gordon
Not much is known about his life as a Jew in Birmingham, but the Bristol Journal of 15 December 1787 reported that Gordon had been living in Birmingham since August 1786:
Unknown to every class of man but those of the Jewish religion, among whom he has passed his time in the greatest cordiality and friendship... he appears with a beard of extraordinary length, and the usual raiment of a Jew... his observance of the culinary (kashrut) laws preparation is remarkable.
He lived with a Jewish woman in the Froggery, a marshy area now under New Street station.
He was surrounded by a number of Jews, who affirmed that his Lordship was Moses risen from the dead in order to instruct them and enlighten the whole world... It appears that (he) has officiated as a chief of the Levitical Order...
While in prison, Gordon lived the life of an
Gordon associated only with pious Jews; in his passionate enthusiasm for his new faith, he refused to deal with any Jew who compromised the Torah's commandments. Although any non-Jew who desired to visit Gordon in prison (and there were many) was welcome, he requested that the prison guards admit Jews only if they had beards and wore head coverings.
He would often, in keeping with Jewish chesed (laws of mercy and charity), go into other parts of the prison to comfort prisoners by speaking with them and playing the violin. In keeping with
Charles Dickens, in his novel Barnaby Rudge, which centres around the Gordon Riots, describes Gordon as a true tzadik (pious man) among the prisoners:
The prisoners bemoaned his loss, and missed him; for though his means were not large his charity was great, and in bestowing alms among them he considered the necessities of all alike, and knew no distinction of sect or creed ...
On 28 January 1793, Lord George Gordon's sentence expired and he had to appear to give claim to his future good behaviour. When appearing in court he was ordered to remove his hat, which he was using as a kippah, but he refused to do so. The hat was then taken from him by force, but he covered his head with a night cap and bound it with a handkerchief. He defended his behaviour by saying "in support of the propriety of the creature having his head covered in reverence to the Creator." Before the court, he read a written statement in which he claimed that "he had been imprisoned for five years among murderers, thieves, etc., and that all the consolation he had arose from his trust in God."
Although his brothers, the 4th Duke of Gordon and Lord William Gordon, and his sister, Lady Westmoreland, offered to cover his bail, Gordon refused their help, saying that to "sue for pardon was a confession of guilt."
Death
In October 1793, Gordon caught typhoid fever, which had been raging in Newgate prison throughout that year. Christopher Hibbert, another biographer, writes that scores of prisoners waited outside the door to his cell for news about his health; friends, regardless of the risk of infection, stood whispering in the room and praying for his recovery – but George "Yisrael bar Avraham" Gordon died on 1 November 1793 (26 Mar-Cheshvan 5554) at the age of 41.
Most likely fearing desecration, Gordon was not buried in a Jewish cemetery but in the detached burial ground of St James's Church, Piccadilly (an Anglican church from which he had been excommunicated.[8][9]), which was located some way from the church, beside Hampstead Road, 820 metres (900 yd) north of Warren Street[10] – it later became St James's Gardens but from June 2017 onwards its burials were reinterred elsewhere to make way for HS2 expansions to Euston station.[11]
Gordon's life story can be found in Yirmeyahu Bindman's dramatized biography, Lord George Gordon (1992),[12] and a defence of his actions is undertaken in Robert Watson's The Life of Lord George Gordon, with a Philosophical Review of his Political Conduct (1795).[13] He is also one of the subjects included by Hugh MacDiarmid in the volume, Scottish Eccentrics (1936).[14] Historical accounts of Lord George Gordon can be found in The Annual Registers from 1780 to the year of his death.
See also
- Philadelphia Nativist Riots
References
- ^ Gordon, Charles The Old Bailey and Newgate, ch.XVIII, pp.204–219, T. Fisher Unwin, London 1902
- ^ a b "GORDON, Lord George (1751–93)". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
- ^ Percy Livingstone Parker, ed., The Journal of John Wesley Chicago USA, Moody Press, nd., p371
- ^ The Feminist Companion to Literature in English, eds Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy (London: Batsford, 1990), p. 276.
- ^ Bindman 1991, pp. 96–97, "chose... his own cousin Thomas Erskine, another Scottish nobleman, close to him in age and in many other respects, whose charm of manner and firm religious beliefs had already made a strong impression in the legal world and in society generally.".
- ^ Harman, Thomas T. (1885). Showell's dictionary of Birmingham. A history and guide ... containing thousands of dates and references to matters of interest connected with the past and present history of the town . Birmingham : Cornish Brothers. p. 90. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
- ^ Bindman 1991, p. 179, "The judge had been well briefed on the circumstances of the case, and he was in no mood to be lenient. He ordered a total of five years in prison, with a fine of five hundred pounds and a pledge of ten thousand pounds as security for his good behavior for fourteen years, plus two more separate sureties of two thousand five hundred pounds each.".
- ^ Picciotto, James (1875). Sketches of Anglo-Jewish History. Trubner & Co. pp. 188–189.
- ISBN 9781421405162.
- ^ "St. James Church, Hampstead Road". Survey of London: volume 21: The parish of St Pancras part 3: Tottenham Court Road & Neighbourhood. 1949. pp. 123–136. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
- ^ "Upcoming works – St James' Gardens and DB Cargo Shed". HS2 in Camden. 13 June 2017. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
- ISBN 1-56062-056-0, LOC 90-86061
- ^ Watson (M.D.), Robert (1795). The Life of Lord George Gordon, with a Philosophical Review of his Political Conduct. London.
- ^ MacDiarmid, Hugh (1936). "Lord George Gordon". Scottish Eccentrics. George Routledge & Sons, Ltd. pp. 1–25.
Works cited
- Bindman, Yirmeyanu (1991). Lord George Gordon. Cis Communications. ISBN 1-56062-056-0.
General references
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Gordon, Lord George". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 253. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
External links
- Lord George Gordon and Cabalistic Freemasonry: Beating Jacobite Swords into Jacobin Ploughshares by Marsha Keith Schuchard