Politics, Shipping, and the Repeal of the Navigation LawsManchester University Press, 1990 - 209 pagina's The repeal of the Navigation Laws in 1849 brought to an end two centuries of legislative protection for British shipping, setting a pattern in the maritime sphere which has lasted until the present day. The end of the laws has proved a less compelling political event than the abolition of the Corn Laws, to which it has sometimes been seen as a mere postscript; and confusion as to how much protection the Navigation Laws provided in the 1840s has led some to conclude that repeal had little practical significance. |
Inhoudsopgave
The shipping interest | 3 |
Ships colonies and commerce | 40 |
Chapter 4 | 62 |
Copyright | |
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America Anti-Corn Law League Association Baltic bill Board of Trade Britain British shipowners British vessels campaign cargo coasting trade commercial Commons S. C. Navigation competition concessions Corn Laws debate defence Duncan Dunbar duties economic evidence favour February foreign shipping Foreign Trade foreign vessels free trade freight G. F. Young George Lyall Gladstone Herries House of Commons House of Lords Huskisson Ibid impact issue June Labouchere legislation liberal Liverpool London Lords S. C. Navigation Manchester Maritime History mercantile marine Merchant Shipping naval Navigation Acts navy North organisation Parliament parliamentary Peel Peelites petitions political proposed protection for shipping protectionist question reciprocity treaties reform repeal Report restrictions Ricardo Russell S. C. Navigation Laws sail Sarah Palmer seamen Select Committee Shipping Gazette shipping interest Society South Shields Stanley steam steamship Sunderland Third Series timber tonnage tons Tory United Kingdom vote Whigs XX Pt