Hinckley Times

Political activist is given blue plaque

John Sketchley was born in town in 1824 and had many children

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A BLUE plaque has been unveiled in Hinckley in recognitio­n of a local framework knitter and political agitator for the working class.

John Sketchley – chartist, secularist, republican, socialist and pamphletee­r – was born in Hinckley in 1824. A framework knitter by trade, John was well placed to understand the distress in the hosiery industry, especially in the 1840s, and became actively involved in chartism, the working-class movement for political reform. He was secretary to the South Leicesters­hire Chartist Associatio­n for 10 years.

During the 1850s, he opposed the system of paying rent for a stocking frame, especially when the wages got lower. Although he came from a Catholic family, John’s radical leanings led to him leaving the church in 1859.

In the late 1860s Sketchley left the hosiery trade and moved to Leicester where he was a bookseller and stationer. He was elected as secretary of the Leicester Secular society in 1867. A period of bankruptcy sadly followed and then Sketchley moved to live in Birmingham. He founded the Midland Social Democratic Federation in 1878, a truly socialist organisati­on. A year later he published a pamphlet called The Principles of Social Democracy.

Sketchley criticised the Reform Bill of 1884 for not bringing in universal suffrage for both men and women. He seems to have contribute­d many articles to the socialist press of this time attacking practicall­y every national institutio­n.

Sketchley was married three times but always suffered from financial problems despite his compatriot­s trying to support him financiall­y. It is thought that he had 15 children, of whom eight were still alive in 1911. Sketchley died in 1913 at the Billesdon Workhouse.

John Sketchley has a blue plaque dedicated to him in Baines Lane in Hinckley where he lived with

Mary Ann in 1861.

The heritage champion for Hinckley and Bosworth Borough Council, Cllr Paul Williams, said: “We have a rich and proud heritage in Hinckley and the surroundin­g area and through this scheme we can honour those individual­s who have made a significan­t contributi­on to the borough’s cultural, industrial or civic legacy over the years. This blue plaque recognises a man who contribute­d widely to local and national politics, with a particular interest and experience of the hosiery trade and the harshness of working in that particular industry.”

Greg Drozdz, local historian and vice chairman of Hinckley and District Museum, said: “When I came across details of John Sketchley on Ned Newitt’s ‘Radical Leicester’ website a couple of years ago, I started to do some additional research myself. I had read his name on many occasions in documents about the early hosiery industry but I was surprised to learn about his national importance.

“I am delighted that we have been able to commemorat­e John Sketchley in this way. I hope more people will look into his background. I hope that people will appreciate John Sketchley as Hinckley’s answer to John Wilkes or Tom Paine.” his second wife

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 ??  ?? From left, Ned Newitt, honorary alderman of Leicester City Council, labour and social historian, Mayor of Hinckley and Bosworth Councillor Mrs Lynda Hodgkins and the Mayor’s consort, David Hodgkins
From left, Ned Newitt, honorary alderman of Leicester City Council, labour and social historian, Mayor of Hinckley and Bosworth Councillor Mrs Lynda Hodgkins and the Mayor’s consort, David Hodgkins
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