Charles Bradlaugh
September 26, 2012
On this date in 1833, England's best-known proponent of atheism, reformer Charles Bradlaugh,
was born in East London. Bradlaugh left school at age 11 to earn his
living. When he announced his freethought views, he was forced to leave
his family home, and found support among other freethinkers, including
the children of oft-jailed publisher Richard Carlile.
Bradlaugh worked as a coal merchant. After joining the army, he worked
as a solicitor's clerk, learned the law and became a skillful attorney.
He wrote and lectured about freethought under the pseudonym
"Iconoclast." Bradlaugh briefly became editor of the freethinking
bi-weekly periodical, the Investigator, in 1858. By the time he became co-editor of the National Reformer
in 1860 he was a famed social reformer and orator, known in England and
abroad. In 1866, he founded the National Secular Society. Bradlaugh had
two daughters and one son with his wife, whose serious drinking problem
broke up the family in 1870. Bradlaugh's challenge in 1868-69 of the
Security Laws, inhibiting distribution of controversial periodicals,
brought their repeal. He also championed land reform. In 1876, he and
colleague Annie Besant were prosecuted for "obscenity" for republishing a birth control booklet, The Fruits of Philosophy, by American doctor Charles Knowlton.
After a grueling trial, the pair were convicted and faced jailtime and
fines, but were freed on a technicality. Bradlaugh was urged to run for
Parliament in 1868, placing fifth. He ran several times before winning
in 1880, but was refused seating because he would not take the religious
oath. Bradlaugh was re-elected by loyal constituents four times before
finally prevailing in his fight to be seated in 1886, a landmark for
British freethinkers, but a legal fight that drained him financially.
Bradlaugh persuaded Parliament to pass a bill permitting the right to
affirm in 1888. Bradlaugh lectured three times in the United States in
the 1870s, and was warmly received in India during his 1889 visit. His
only surviving child, Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, took up the freethought/reform cudgels, also defending her father's reputation from numerous "death-bed conversion" fables. D. 1891.
“I maintain that thoughtful Atheism affords greater possibility for human happiness than any system yet based on, or possible to be founded on, Theism, and that the lives of true Atheists must be more virtuous--because more human--than those of the believers in Deity, . . .
Atheism, properly understood, is no mere disbelief; is in no wise a cold, barren negative; it is, on the contrary, a hearty, fruitful affirmation of all truth, and involves the positive assertion of action of highest humanity.”
— Charles Bradlaugh, "A Plea for Atheism," Humanity's Gain from Unbelief (1929)
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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