Rayner Stephens

Portrait of Joseph Rayner Stephens, engraved by James Posselwhite after a painting by Benjamin Garside. Commissioned by Feargus O'Connor, this engraving was distributed with 25.000 copies of the chartist newspaper the Northern Star in November 1839. When Stephens less than a month later denounced the movement in reaction to the Newport Rising, chartists responded by publicly burning his portrait

Joseph Rayner Stephens (8 March 1805 – 18 February 1879) was a Methodist minister who offended the Wesleyan Conference by his support for separating the Church of England from the State. Resigning from the Wesleyan Connection, he became free to campaign for factory reform, and against the New Poor Law. He became associated with 'physical force' Chartism (although he later denied he had ever been a Chartist) and spent eighteen months in jail for his presence at an unlawful assembly and his use there of seditious language. Born in Edinburgh in 1805, he moved to Manchester when his minister father was posted there in 1819. During his religious career, he worked in a variety of places (including Stockholm and Newcastle-upon-Tyne[1]) before arriving in Ashton-under-Lyne in 1832. He was the brother of the philologist George Stephens.;[2] three of his other brothers (John, Edward and Samuel) emigrated to Southern Australia and played their parts in the early years of that colony.

  1. ^ "some years ago stationed in this town as a Wesleyan Methodist preacher""Great Radical Demonstration". Newcastle Journal. 6 January 1838.
  2. ^ Hovell, Mark [at Wikisource] (1918). Thomas Frederick Tout (ed.). The Chartist Movement . Manchester: University of Manchester. p. 88.