1. Stedman Jones, G. ‘Working-Class Culture and Working Class Politics in London, 1870–1900;Notes on the Remaking of a Working Class’,Journal of Social History, 7, 4 (Summer 1974), 460–508;P. Thane, ‘Labour and Local Politics: Radicalism, Democracy and Social Reform, 1880–1914’, in E. Biagini and A. Reid, eds,Currents of Radicalism(Cambridge, 1991), 244–70
2. 1984. For examples of this view, see A. Howkins, ‘Edwardian Liberalism and Industrial Unrest: A Class View of the Decline of Liberalism’,History Workshop, 4 (Autumn 1977). This is a case-study of Norfolk. For Yorkshire, see K. Laybourn and J. Reynolds,Liberalism and the Rise of Labour, 1890–1918, (London, The most complete version of this argument is provided by R. McKibbin,The Evolution of the Labour Party(Oxford, 1974
3. Pelling, H. 1968.Popular Politics and Society in Late Victorian Britain120London
4. Morgan, K. 1974. “The New Liberalism and the Challenge of Labour: The Welsh Experience, 1885–1929”. in K.D. Brown, ed.Essays in Anti-Labour History(London