Provincial perspectives are largely lacking in accounts of the emergence of the second reform act, but a vigorous and innovative popular movement for reform emerged in the mid-1860s. A burgeoning newspaper press both conveyed and itself did much to create a sense of accelerating movement unparalleled since chartism. Former chartists, notably Ernest Jones, were significant organisers, but the infusion of this movement into communities hitherto untouched by organised popular politics was widespread. Formal organisations can be identified in at least 282 separate localities outside London. Conservative working men’s associations, by contrast, were slow to emerge and ephemeral. A rich material and performative culture bore witness to workers’ s...