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The Liberal Party was one of the two major British political parties from the early 19th century until the 1920s, and a third party of varying strength and importance up to 1988, when it merged with the Social Democratic Party to form a new party which would become known as the Liberal Democrats.
(Some members of the Liberal Party disagreed with the merger, and formed the current Liberal Party, a minor party which claims to be a continuation of the old Liberal Party.)
The Liberal Party grew out of the Whig Party, which had its origins as an aristocratic faction in the reign of Charles II. The Whigs were in favour of reducing the power of the Crown and increasing the power of the Parliament, and although their motives in this were originally to gain more power for themselves, the more idealistic Whigs gradually came to support an expansion of democracy for its own sake. The great figures of reforming Whiggery were Charles James Fox (died 1804) and his disciple and successor Earl Grey. After decades in opposition the Whigs came to power under Grey in 1830, and carried the First Reform Act in 1832.
The Reform Act was the climax of Whiggery, but also brought about the Whigs' demise. The admission of the middle classes to the franchise and to the House of Commons led eventually to the development of a systematic middle class liberalism and the end of Whiggery, although for many years reforming aristocrats held senior positions in the party. In the years after Grey's retirement the party was led first by Lord Melbourne, a fairly traditional Whig, and then by Lord John Russell, the son of an Earl but a crusading radical, and Lord Palmerston, a renegade Irish ToryThe term Tory derives from the Tory Party the ancestor of the modern UK Conservative Party. To this day it is often used as a shortened alternative for Conservative. A similar usage for Tory exists in Canada to describe the Conservative Party. It was also and essentially a conservative, although capable of radical gestures.
As early as 1839Events January 9 The French Academy of Sciences announces the Daguerreotype photography process. January 19 British East India Company captures Aden January 20 In the Battle of Yungay, Chile defeats a Peruvian and Bolivian alliance. February 24 William Ot Russell had adopted the name Liberal Party, but in reality the party was a loose coalition of Whigs in the House of LordsThis article is about the British House of Lords. See also the historical Irish House of Lords. The House of Lords is a component of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, which also includes the Sovereign and the British House of Commons. The House of Lor and RadicalsThe Radicals were a left wing political grouping in Britain in the early to mid 19th century. The Radical movement arose in the early 19th century to support parliamentary reform, Catholic emancipation, and free trade, and were instrumental in the foundin in the Commons. The leading Radicals were John BrightJohn Bright ( November 16, 1811 March 27, 1889), was a British politician, associated with Richard Cobden in the formation of the Anti-Corn Law League. Bright was born at Rochdale in Lancashire one of the early centres of the Industrial Revolution. His fa and Richard CobdenRichard Cobden ( June 3, 1804 April 2, 1865) was an English manufacturer and Radical politician. Early years Cobden was born at a farmhouse called Dunford, near Midhurst, in Sussex, England. The family had been resident in that neighbourhood for many gene, who represented the manufacturing towns which had gained representation under the Reform Act. They favoured social reform, personal liberty, reducing the powers of the Crown and the Church of England (many of them were Nonconformists), avoidance of war and foreign alliances (which were bad for business), and above all free trade. For a century free trade was the one cause which could unite all Liberals.
In 1841 the Liberals lost office to the Conservatives under Sir Robert Peel, but their period in opposition was short, because the Conservatives split over the repeal of the Corn Laws, a free trade issue, and a faction known as the Peelites (but not Peel himself), defected to the Liberal side. This allowed ministries led by Russell, Palmerston and the Peelite Lord Aberdeen to hold office for most of the 1850s and '60s. The leading Peelite was William Gladstone, who was a zealous reforming Chancellor of the Exchequer in most of these governments.
The Whig-Radical amalgam could not become a true modern political party, however, while it was dominated by aristocrats, and it was not until the departure of the "Two Terrible Old Men," Russell and Palmerston, that Gladstone could become the first leader of the modern Liberal Party. This was brought about by Palmerston's death in 1865 and Russell's retirement in 1868. After a brief Conservative interlude (during which the Second Reform Act was passed by agreement between the parties), Gladstone won a huge victory at the 1868 election and formed the first Liberal government. The establishment of the party as a national membership organisation came with the foundation of the National Liberal Federation in 1877.