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Introduction

This book explores how sex between men was understood within British society in the first half of the nineteenth century. It does so by examining hundreds of public reports, many from newspaper and courtroom accounts, of sex between men in the years 1820 to 1870. Analysis of these narratives calls into question key elements of earlier scholarship on how these acts (real or alleged) were understood and discussed in early-nineteenth-century Britain.

It has long been assumed that the discussion of sex between men in the public sphere in mid-nineteenth-century Britain was minimal. A shift in public morals beginning in the late eighteenth century had severely limited official documentation of this behavior and its legal repercussions, as the state curtailed its record-keeping of trials involving sexual crimes. Overt and even oblique references to sex between men also disappeared from literature and popular writing. The silence on this issue began in the late Georgian period and is generally thought to have continued with only limited interruptions until the late nineteenth century.

In the late Victorian period, public anxiety over sex between men was fueled by fears of declining middle-class values and perceived threats to Britain’s place in the world. A series of sensational trials—including those related to middle-class cross-dressers in 1870, upper-class men paying for sex with telegraph delivery boys in 1889–90, and an internationally known playwright defending his honor against charges of sodomy in 1895—made sex between men a topic of sensational newspaper reporting. This material was often read in the context of the contemporary effort by some European physicians to define the nature and origins of male same-sex desire in medical terms, and together these factors have spawned a great deal of work by modern scholars on the origins of the modern homosexual identity. Almost all the secondary literature and most guides to the nineteenth-century British sources, including both print and electronic newspaper indexes, leave the impression that sex between men was not a topic of regular public discussion.

But mainstream newspapers ran hundreds of articles pertaining to sex between men in the years after 1820. The coverage was not primarily of sensational court cases but rather of the legal tribulations of ordinary men. Statements from the time indicate that men who read the newspapers regularly were assumed to be aware of this reporting, and the scope of this newspaper coverage makes it clear that sex between men, and its fallout, was a part of regular public discourse.

Uncovering much of this material has meant using the names, trial dates, and trial locations preserved in nineteenth-century state records in conjunction with the full text of multiple newspapers, as opposed to relying on indexing terms that mask the extent of coverage. The material located in this manner in turn led to further source material both within and outside state collections. Taken together, this evidence, pertaining to hundreds of cases, provides the opportunity to construct a social history not only of the men who felt same-sex desire but also of the men and women in their families and communities who were affected by their actions. It shows how reactions varied according to class, demonstrating that understandings of this behavior were largely determined by material resources and the cultural texts available for the interpretation of desires.1 There was no single, unified understanding of sex between men in the early to mid-nineteenth century, and analyzing the differences across class divisions is the first goal of this book.

Achieving this goal requires focusing greater attention on the examples of individuals like Frederick Samuel Lea, the sixteen-year-old servant of a London bookseller who, in January 1840, fended off three separate unwanted sexual advances from a male customer of the store. Lea had not told anyone after the first or even the second advance, but at the time of the third, which occurred outside the store, he confided in a fellow servant and asked for her assistance. It was not until several days later that Lea first told his story to a policeman, and then the officer did not act on Lea’s accusation; instead he told Lea to take up the matter with his master. The young man’s employer likewise did not want to act on the boy’s story, and instead told him to speak with his father. The father’s reaction was not recorded, but it had little bearing on the eventual arrest of the man making advances on his son. It was only when Lea saw the man walking down Great Russell Street at night in the company of another young man that he was able to convince a nearby police officer that he had a serious charge to make. The officer’s willingness to believe Lea was bolstered when the man ran away once he noticed he was being observed.2

Both Lea and the man making unwanted sexual advances toward him exhibited behaviors typical of men of their class. Lea’s economic status tied him to the public space of the bookshop in a way that made him vulnerable to an unwanted advance, and although Lea himself was not tempted by the offer of money for sexual acts, other working-class men in similar situations were. The individuals whom Lea asked for advice knew that they could resort to the law, but they also knew that this approach could be difficult and even dangerous, as prosecutions were expensive and the man making the unwanted advances was from an upper-class family. The newspapers regularly showed the many advantages that men of property could employ when confronted with charges of unnatural assault by poorer individuals, and Lea could easily find himself facing countercharges of attempting to extort money by making a charge of “an infamous crime.”3 Younger men like Lea could often ask their working-class fathers or brothers to accompany them in confronting a wealthier individual who had made an unwanted advance, and although Lea did not get this level of support, his willingness to seek help from his family and community network, facilitated by the fact that he had not instigated the contacts, was typical.

The class background of George Dawson Lowndes, the twenty-six-year-old man making the unwanted advances, also structured his engagement with the situation. His understanding of his desires was at least partially mediated by the texts he knew from his education. The first two advances began with Lowndes speaking to Lea in a secluded part of the store and showing Lea sexually suggestive material in the books of the collection.4 That Lowndes aggressively pursued an individual ten years his junior and of lower social status also showed him to be following a rakish form of masculinity typical of the upper-class men who ended up in the courtroom on these charges. Lowndes was also typical of the men of his class in his efforts to gain special consideration: he wrote multiple letters to the Home Office after his eventual conviction, in which he seems certain that he will be released once the right personal connection is made and in which he presents a version of the story formulated to discredit his lower-class accuser. Unlike Lowndes, most men who tried this approach were successful.

Working with hundreds of court cases provides the ability to discern the behaviors typical of upper-, working-, and middle-class men and to track those behaviors through the social, economic, and political changes that occurred in the first half of the nineteenth century and led to a distinctly new pattern of regulating sex between men. The years between 1815 and 1850 were some of the most tumultuous in modern British history: the threat of revolution was never more acute, and the economic hardships stemming from industrialization and urbanization were never more intense. The second goal of this book, and another not previously achieved in the secondary literature, is to connect the shift in how sex between men was regulated and understood in the early nineteenth century to these larger historical events.

Given that the evidence of sex between men from the eighteenth and late nineteenth centuries was so much more sensational and readily accessible, it is little wonder that historians initially neglected the intervening period. The exploration of the eighteenth-century cases was begun by historians in the 1970s, in part because the details of most of the eighteenth-century sodomy trials were readily accessible in the published Session Papers of the Old Bailey.5 The resulting scholarship established the association of certain public spaces in London with sex between men, indicating that some men strongly identified with their sexual desires for other men and were able to construct communities with other men of similar feelings. In addition, individuals such as John Cooper, the cross-dressing “Princess Seraphina,” were shown to have been visible over long periods in the working-class communities where they lived. The work of organizations, including the Societies for the Reformation of Manners, was also examined, as scholars demonstrated how occasional raids on molly houses were staged by private organizations beginning in the early 1700s, and reported in the press along with the stories of indignant crowds lining the streets to taunt the convicted men.6 The 1810 prosecution of the Vere Street Coterie, which met at the White Swan public house, is one of the most often recounted of these molly-house raids, and one of the last incidents to be cited in works that focus on the patterns associated with the eighteenth century.

Even more scholarly attention has been focused on the late nineteenth century. Almost from the time academics first began to turn their attention to issues of homosexuality in history, a handful of cases and events beginning in 1870 have been in the foreground. The popular work of H. Montgomery Hyde helped ensure that the Boulton and Park trial, the Cleveland Street Scandal, and the Dublin Castle Affair were known to modern scholars. Hyde also provided one of the most important early accounts of the Oscar Wilde trials and the Labouchère Amendment to the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885, although many other writers, beginning with individuals such as Holbrook Jackson, had long kept Wilde’s story current.7 The first and most significant of the academic books to offer a broader historical interpretation of these trials was Jeffrey Weeks’s Coming Out, which historicized the development of homosexual identity and distinguished it from the more common and ahistorical phenomenon of homosexual behavior.8 The infamous trials of the later nineteenth century became important markers in the work of many scholars, and not simply because of the sustained level of national attention they received in their own day. Occurring at a time when middle-class values were increasingly challenged politically, socially, and intellectually by the working class, women’s organizations, avant-garde artistic experimentation, and new intellectual movements—including the growth of sexology as a scientific discipline—these trials were rightly seen by scholars as reflecting cultural transformations, and they became the subject of an increasing number of wide-ranging interpretations in a variety of disciplines.9 Assumptions about the links between middle-class social anxiety and the increased visibility of homosexuality in the late nineteenth century have become commonplace, and the connection is often invoked even in textbook accounts of the period.10

A great deal of important interpretative work came from the study of these cases, but the degree of attention focused on them brought its own problems. Because much of the work on these trials was outside the discipline of history, archival research and the search for precedents were not a priority. Moreover, contemporary statements in newspaper and trial documents reinforced the impression that such scandals were rare and that there were long periods of public silence between them.11 This pattern of silence and rupture seemed to be similar to the periodic eruption of the eighteenth-century sodomy prosecutions. It also seemed to coincide with a metaphor of the closet, of the open secret rarely discussed, and of a language of periodic discovery and forgetting that steadily gained momentum over the decades in scholarly work focused on sex between men and same-sex desire.12

The seeming similarity between the public discussion of sex between men at both ends of the nineteenth century led to a neglect of the serious study of the early to mid-nineteenth century, resulting in a distorted view of the period as a whole. This pattern is evident in books as diverse as those produced by Alan Sinfield, Neil Bartlett, and Jeffrey Weeks, each of which claims to account for patterns throughout the nineteenth century. Each of these works has played an important and influential part in moving the historiography forward in different ways. Weeks largely established the study of homosexuality within the academy. Bartlett’s work provided an engaging, influential, and highly personalized interpretation of the periodic “discovery” of male same-sex desire by the society at large, and Sinfield addressed the important and often-neglected task of separating the cultural understanding of effeminacy from that of sex between men. All three authors make claims about the nineteenth century, but very little of their information is focused on the years 1810–70. None of these authors emphasizes any significant break, rupture, or discontinuity during this time. Instead, a number of events are used to connect the Vere Street molly-house raid of 1810 and the more heavily analyzed period beginning in 1870.

Works as recent as Matt Cook’s 2003 study of homosexuality and the urban environment of London also replicate this pattern to some extent.13 Cook’s work focuses on the period between 1885 and 1914, but he opens his narrative with a survey of the British material related to sex between men from the Renaissance to the late nineteenth century. His account also moves rapidly from the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century material to the 1870 trial of Boulton and Park. Other recent works on male homosexuality in nineteenth-century Britain, by Sean Brady and Morris Kaplan, have also kept their focus on the final decades of the century and largely overlook events before the 1860s.14

The work that offers the most detailed examination of the first half of the nineteenth century is H. G. Cocks’s Nameless Offences: Homosexual Desire in the Nineteenth Century. Cocks was the first scholar to call attention to the imposition of the two-year sentence for prosecutions of sex between men and the first to use parliamentary papers and court records to demonstrate the frequency of unnatural-assault and attempted-sodomy prosecutions throughout the nineteenth century. More than any other researcher, Cocks has helped to correct one of the most persistent and distorting misinterpretations in the secondary literature over the frequency of prosecutions for sex between men.15 Yet although Cocks discusses the changes in the law and patterns of prosecution in the 1820s early in his book, the subsequent chapters draw most of their examples from the later nineteenth century. Cocks uses his more fully developed view of the early nineteenth century primarily as a ground for developing his analysis of the later nineteenth century, providing both new interpretations of familiar material, such as the Cleveland Street Scandal and the Dublin Castle Affair, and extended analysis of new archival discoveries, including an exploration of desires and identities within a circle of male friends known among themselves as the Bolton Whitman Fellowship, who met at the end of the nineteenth century.

Because of Cocks’s greater interest in the later period, important changes that occurred between 1820 and 1850 are only lightly sketched. A survey of the extent of newspaper reporting of trials involving sex between men was not a part of Cocks’s project, and therefore the increase in unnatural-assault reporting from the 1820s through the 1860s, and what that reporting indicated about the public perceptions of sex between men, remains largely unexplored in his study. Although only a fraction of the thousands of court cases in these earlier decades left more than statistical information behind, taken together and combined with other sources, these fragments provide a unique picture of these transitional decades and demonstrate not only how men who had sex with men interpreted and acted on their desires, but also how members of their families and communities understood those behaviors.16

A better understanding of attitudes toward sexual behavior in these decades is especially important because the early nineteenth century witnessed a profound shift in the practice of law enforcement, from a system reliant on relatively rare but brutal displays of punishment on the offender’s body to one that sought to reform behavior through a system of observation and regulation. Part of this shift entailed a move away from the public use of death penalty and the pillory and toward more frequent and consistent punishment with lesser sentences. Over time this shift influenced how individuals thought of the relationship between the law and the regulation of individual behavior, including behaviors related to sex between men. This change must be explored not only through statistical analysis but also at a social and cultural level.17 Cultural context is just as important for explaining transitions in the understandings of sex between men for the early nineteenth century as it is for the final decades of the nineteenth century. For all the strengths of both the “new” and the “old” gay history, no work has yet paid sufficient attention to the changes of the early nineteenth century.18

Closer analysis of events in the earlier nineteenth century is also necessary in order to provide a link between the discordant narratives of the two ends of the nineteenth century. In both style and substance as well as in descriptive vocabulary, there is a substantial divide between the representation of the molly-house culture and general Georgian bawdiness of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and the descriptions of conduct in the public and private spaces of London from 1870 onward. The degree to which the transformations of urban life influenced the availability of sex between men needs to be better defined, in relation to both the men who felt same-sex desire and those who engaged in such acts for other reasons. We know of a handful of men in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries who were identified as “buggers by nature,” but what relationship do these men have to “the homosexual,” a type defined by his choice of sexual object?19 How did some men interpret their sexual acts with other men so as not to profoundly affect how they perceived themselves? Finally, with respect to controlling sexuality between men, how did the goals of the family, the law, and, eventually, medical theorists complement, conflict with, and shape one another?

Given the common assumptions about the role of economic and social change in the development of sexuality as social category, it is interesting that the understandings of sex between men in Britain in the first half of the nineteenth century have remained so understudied. David Halperin has noted that both before and after Foucault, scholars have argued that “something new happens to the various relations among sexual roles, sexual object-choices, sexual categories, sexual behaviors, and sexual identities in bourgeois Europe between the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the twentieth. Sex takes on new social and individual functions, and it assumes a new importance in defining and normalizing the modern self.” Halperin also observes that many scholars take it “as established that a large-scale transformation of social and personal life took place in Europe as a part of the massive cultural reorganization that accompanied the transition from a traditional, hierarchical, status-based society to a modern, individualistic, mass society during the period of industrialization and the rise of a capitalist economy.”20 For Britain, the most critical years in that trans- formation, and the years during which the threat of outright political revolution stemming from these changes seemed most acute, occurred between the end of the Napoleonic wars in 1815 and the European revolutions of 1848.

For any other topic in British society, attention to changes between 1815 and 1850 would be commonplace rather than controversial. The period overlaps what has been known to generations of British historians as the “Age of Reform,” and if the nature of the changes during this period has been called into question in recent years, most historians still agree that it saw fundamental alterations in the way the state, the society, and the economy were organized.21 The change in governing institutions especially was abrupt because fear of revolution at home had led the governing class to resist deviations from traditional political arrangements. An expansion of the franchise had been seriously considered in the 1780s, but most talk of such experiments was stifled after the September massacres of 1792 in France, which seemed to confirm that bloodshed and anarchy might accompany the modification of traditional institutions. Not until the 1820s, during the more liberal phase of Lord Liverpool’s long administration, did the government begin seriously to confront the task of realigning state institutions with the society and economy that had changed around them. The delay in reform often led to stark contrasts between the previous arrangements and the new methods proposed to modify or replace them.

The wars with France also exacerbated the tensions stemming from the industrial and demographic changes that had been building in England in the second half of the eighteenth century. The displacement of rural farm labor associated with the commercialization of agriculture combined with rapid overall population increase from the mid-eighteenth century onward to create a class of displaced and desperate laborers. The mass migration of labor to urban and industrial centers disrupted previous patterns of rural social organization, with new systems to take their place in the ever-expanding cities at best improvised and at worst nonexistent.22 Over these years Britain went from being primarily a rural to primarily an urban society, and yet the historic British reluctance to create state institutions that could impinge on British liberty meant that many problems associated with urbanization were not addressed until they became acute. Britain’s path to industrialization and urbanization was thoroughly unplanned, with no foreign model to copy as a positive example, to learn from as a negative example, or even to prove that society could weather such upheavals. Benjamin Disraeli was only the most famous of the many authors and social commentators who grappled with the “condition of England” question in these decades, seeking solutions to the urgent and fundamental question of how society might be reorganized.

The shift to a capitalist industrial economy involved an ideological shift in moral values as well as physical relocation. Institutions such as wage labor and the factory system were initially denounced by many in the upper ranks as well as in the lower orders as shocking innovations that ignored the mutual obligations inherent in the relationship between property owners and those who worked for them. The idea that employers dispatched all their obligations to workers simply with a cash payment, regardless of the short-term or long-term needs of those workers or their families, might be one means by which the middle class was increasing its wealth, but it was not a value held by the gentry or the aristocracy.23 In arguing against such a system and for the reciprocal responsibility inherent in the relationship between workers and employers, the lower class was seemingly on solid ground. They could claim not only the sanction of religion but also that of long-standing upper-class practices that had governed much of rural life.

And yet, in this struggle over the fundamental economic relationship among the classes, the middle class succeeded in claiming the language of morality as its own. The crisis of the French Revolution and the need to maintain both public order and economic production over a decades-long period of social upheaval were credited with helping to ease upper-class objections to middle-class economic and social innovations. But it was the growth of the Evangelical movement within the Church of England, and the strong identification of the middle class with this rigorous version of the official faith, that allowed them to establish the ground of morality as their own. Although there were many working-class Evangelicals, and the movement within the Church of England was pioneered by many powerful members of the upper class, such as William Wilberforce, in its emphasis on personal morality, responsibility to family, and loyalty to established authorities, Evangelical religion was well suited to the economic and social interests of the middle class, and over time it became most strongly identified with that group. For Evangelical men, the test of a man’s character was his personal morality and his success at supporting his family, rather than his fulfillment of obligations to the community at large, and in this way Evangelical religion helped create the first generations of Britain’s industrial middle class.24 The Evangelical movement had been growing in strength even before the outbreak of the French Revolution, yet it was the fundamental threat that the revolution represented that increased the influence and power of Evangelicals within English governing circles. Evangelical religion proved a successful vehicle for shoring up a greater base of support for the aristocratic government in England and was a substantial factor in the English upper class’s weathering the challenges of the wars intact and in control.25

The growing power of Evangelicals in society had implications for personal as well as economic morality. Michael Mason, Roy Porter, Lesley Hall, and Linda Colley have discussed the reformation of manners that British society underwent during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars and how it affected individual behavior at all class levels.26 Modes of public behavior associated with the upper class in the eighteenth century defined individual propriety differently. Men and women in the upper classes had latitude for indiscretions within marriage, so long as certain rules of etiquette and decorum were observed, and this period in general is associated with greater freedom of expression on sexual topics.27

Although these patterns were suppressed in the nineteenth century, the manners and morals at the highest levels of British society remained different from and often antagonistic to those of the middle class. Upper-class masculinity, especially, retained its distinct character, tolerating activities such as gambling, the consumption of alcohol, and the enjoyment of violent physical sports. Although some upper-class men attempted to better justify their privileged position in society through the adoption of aspects of the middle-class work ethic, it was equally acceptable to emphasize that only those who did not have to earn their fortunes had the leisure and broad perspective necessary for the governance of society as a whole. The upper-class dandy of the early nineteenth century did not fit a middle-class man’s definition of an individual of good character, but the dandy’s conviviality and manners could secure his reputation among his upper-class peers: reputation was more central to an upper-class man’s status than was the more middle-class concept of character.28 The distinctions and antagonisms between upper- and middle-class men’s ideas of morality and masculinity remained sharp.

Also affected by the changing moral climate at the start of the century, even working-class individuals strongly influenced by Methodism drew the lines of responsibility governing relations within the family and the community differently from members of the middle and upper classes. Among the working class, for example, greater tolerance was displayed toward premarital sexual relations, provided a couple intended to marry, and a higher value was placed on obligations to the local community.29 Increasingly in the nineteenth century, these and other working-class values came under attack as not only different from middle-class understandings of morality but also as inferior to them and the cause of the economic distress of the working class.

Middle-class notions of economic and personal morality combined in the reform of the Poor Law in 1834. One result for the working class was the abolition of a previous system of “outdoor” assistance on which many periodically depended and which many considered integral to the system of mutual obligations between the classes. The New Poor Law also stigmatized working-class women who became pregnant out of wedlock, making a woman solely responsible for the maintenance of her illegitimate children. Yet in an age when divorce was attainable only through an act of Parliament, pregnancy before marriage served an important function for the working class. Because the labor of children was vital to the survival of the working-class household, pregnancy before marriage offered evidence that a couple could have children together; it was therefore compatible with working-class morality and often seen as an economic survival strategy. Without a voice in Parliament, the working class had no opportunity to articulate the logic and morality of such practices in Westminster. The final legislation, which affected the lives of millions of Britons for generations, was framed around Evangelical notions of morality and middle-class economic imperatives.

The Poor Law reform was only one of many examples of the nineteenth-century reworking of institutions of government and the implementation of new ideas about its responsibility and scope. The state’s new authority in shaping the role of the individual in society was also evident in the modest protections offered by the first Factory Acts and in the development of new systems of policing and new experiments in incarceration designed to modify behavior through surveillance and discipline. Underpinning these changes were newly ascendant ideologies stemming from liberal political and economic philosophy and the Evangelical revival, and the new concentrations of wealth and state power stemming from industrialization and wartime government expansion made such experiments possible. In an era when many felt that the old ties of local community and deference were fast coming undone, the search for new systems that might replace them and stabilize society were of paramount importance.30

None of those reforms, including those that affected the regulation of sexual acts between men, were carried out with the stated goal of affecting such sexual behavior. The changes relevant to the regulation of sex between men were only small components of much broader programs of reform. In this respect there is much evidence to confirm the cliché that throughout the nineteenth century, men avoided publicly discussing this topic.31 The difficulty, though, was that many individual officials became involved in situations where such discussion could not be avoided, just as many individuals were likewise compelled to speak publicly about this behavior as laws were rewritten and a more intrusive level of policing was established. The moral injunction against sex between men remained in place in the early nineteenth century, but changes in the state and in society meant that the potential consequences of such acts shifted, sparking both public and private debates and discussions. One such debate, and one example of grappling with the potential consequences, was carried on between Frederick Samuel Lea and his father, his employer, and his fellow employee; the results were shared with the nation, as mediated through the newspapers and the courts. This book explores the cumulative effect of hundreds of such debates, and what they reveal about the social, political, and economic changes of the early nineteenth century.

Because the state’s efforts in this area intruded on terrain previously considered the prerogative of the family, part 1 of this book explores families and their responses to the issue of sex between men. Although in no case do the records show that family members treated the discovery of sex between men with any form of acceptance or even indifference, their reactions are more complex than the vitriolic denunciations and instant ostracisms that seem to be implied by the public statements associated with the better-known trials of the later nineteenth century. The discovery of sex between men was treated as a crisis by families of all classes, but the nature of that crisis, and the form of response it required, differed significantly according to class. Although almost all responses sought to punish the individual or individuals responsible for instigating the behavior, they also more often than not allowed for the reincorporation of the men into the family. The severity of the transgression that such an act represented and the degree to which it might or might not be considered “the worst of crimes” were open to debate.

Chapter 2 turns to the question of how the men engaging in sex with other men understood those acts. Sex between men was condemned by all men in their public lives, although social class and geographic space could affect a man’s perception of what it meant to privately have sex with another man. Upper- and working-class men’s understandings of masculine identity might allow for sexual contact between men under some conditions. Within the middle-class understanding of respectability and character, such behavior was more problematic. The distinction between the desire for sex and the desire for sex with a man was central to these justifications, as were the types of physical acts engaged in, an individual’s age, and the individual’s active or passive role in those acts. Locations such as the Mediterranean, the public school, and the urban environment of London could all be associated with sexual acts between men, with the same act having different meanings and different consequences depending on the location. At least a few men in this period left records indicating that they did structure part of their personal identity around such desires. For other men, however, understanding the multiple possible attitudes toward sex between men is crucial to comprehending the nature of the changes that occurred in the nineteenth century.

The three chapters of part 2 examine the institutional forces that influenced understandings of this behavior throughout society. All three areas examined—the laws, policing, and the newspapers—were, not for the first time, influencing the regulation of sex between men in the early nineteenth century. In England the laws against sodomy and attempted sodomy date back to the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries respectively.32 The early watch system facilitated arrests of men on charges of sex between men, just as the later Metropolitan Police would. Private pamphlets and Old Bailey Session Papers published the details of sodomy and attempted-sodomy trials before the newspapers eclipsed them in this role. Yet despite these precedents for punishing and publicizing acts of sex between men, each one of these three broad areas underwent significant transformations in the early nineteenth century.

These shifts are shown most clearly in chapter 3, which assesses the changes in the relevant laws. It begins by considering the revision of the laws against sodomy, attempted sodomy, unnatural assault, and “threatening to accuse of an infamous crime” in the context of Robert Peel’s effort to consolidate English criminal law. The penalties and evidence requirements for cases involving sex between men were altered in statute law, although this change did not always affect what had been occurring in practice under common law. Some examples, such as the imposition of a two-year prison sentence for attempted sodomy and unnatural assault, suggest little real change beyond the increased frequency of application of the law. Other changes in statute law, such as those related to the threat to accuse another man of attempting an infamous crime, had real consequences in the courtroom. I argue here that the need to modify this law was a result of the increased use of the laws against attempted sodomy and unnatural assault in the courts. Not only did these laws allow men to bring their social betters into court on their word alone, but the accusation impugned the character of the accused in a way particularly egregious to men invested in current notions of respectability. This consequence partially explains why the penalties for making a false accusation were so much more severe than those for unnatural assault itself. Close examination of the revision of the laws related to sex between men indicates the ways in which class antagonisms and differing definitions of masculinity shaped the reform process.

The interconnected themes of class antagonism and transformations in systems of state control are explored further in chapter 4, which focuses on the early years of the Metropolitan Police. Contrasting the policing of the 1820s to that of the 1830s and 1840s, this chapter argues that many aspects of the public policing of sex between men were established in West End neighborhoods well before 1829. The most important changes after 1829 consisted of the increased frequency of arrests, the new uniformity of the police presence throughout the city, and the self-policing this inspired. This chapter also focuses on the difficult position of the common officer in policing sex between men, which reflected the problems of working-class men in general when invoking these laws against propertied men. The precarious line these officers walked became most evident in 1830, when, on their own initiative, a small group of constables went into Hyde Park to entrap men who were soliciting sex from other men. The controversy that erupted when these officers began to bring middle- and upper-class men to court on unnatural-assault charges is examined as a microcosm of the clash between competing notions of class, morality, and masculinity that was sparked by the institutionalization of a police force of working-class constables.

Chapter 5 focuses on newspapers in the early nineteenth century, comparing the ways that different publications chose to cover unnatural- assault stories from the 1820s through the 1860s, when such coverage was at its height. Although it also brings to light some major events and “scandals” centering on sex between men that have not been discussed in the secondary literature, this chapter focuses on the brief reports of sex between men that appeared in the court sections of some papers. The Times, the Weekly Dispatch, and the Morning Post are analyzed as the leading middle-, working-, and upper-class newspapers of their day, respectively; together they published nearly one thousand reports over a fifty-year period. This analysis reveals that the liberal daily press was responsible for the greatest number of stories concerning sex between men. The chapter ends with an examination of newspaper readership among different segments of the population and argues that the majority of men in mid-nineteenth-century London were most likely aware of what was reported in “that part of the paper.” This and other evidence suggests the need to reassess assumptions about how and to what degree sex between men was discussed within the public sphere.

The third and final part of the book assesses the impact of the changes discussed in part 2, beginning in chapter 6 with the identification of patterns in the new systems regulating sex between men. Certain types of cases, such as those involving only working-class men, were regularly underreported in the liberal newspapers, just as sexual acts between men occurring in certain geographic locations, like the West End, were more likely to lead to arrests. Contrary to what might be expected, it was not the male cross-dresser, the debauched aristocrat, or the man already repeatedly engaging in sexual acts with other men who was the primary target of the new systems of regulation.

The state and the newspapers instead most often drew attention to casual sexual encounters in public space between men of differing class backgrounds who could otherwise present themselves as respectable. In such encounters, the focus of the reporting was the sexuality of the respectable middle-class man.

The concluding chapter takes the idea that the sexual desire of respectable middle-class men was the most problematic for society and attempts to understand the medical theorization of same-sex desire in light of this fundamental point. British physicians shared the common cultural view that sex between men was incompatible with moral behavior, and this view has led to sharp contrasts being drawn between these physicians and Continental theorists such as Richard von Krafft-Ebing, who developed and popularized a theory allowing for same-sex desire to be inborn in an individual rather than acquired over time through immoral behavior. Greater awareness of how class structured understandings of sex between men in Britain, though, reveals that Krafft-Ebing’s work represented less of a break with the ideals of character and respectability in Britain than has sometimes been assumed. Ironically, the first important attempt to explain sex between men by a British physician, Havelock Ellis (working in conjunction with John Addington Symonds), represented a more significant rupture with past British understandings. This innovation of Ellis and Symonds was as much related to the shifting intellectual climate of their time as it was to the evolution of sexology as a scientific discipline.

The conclusion reinforces the book’s argument that shifts in the conceptualization of the self and in perceptions of experience can be understood only in the context of the culture within which they are generated. We can better understand the cultural significance of male same-sex desire at any given time by looking at the society in which it is expressed. Such an inquiry may have broader implications than simply providing a better understanding of sexual acts between men. For a generation, scholars have been formulating useful cultural insights over the increased attention to homosexuality at the end of the nineteenth century and its relationship to the generally perceived decline of bourgeois values. Similar cultural insights may come from a better understanding of the characteristically different but also prominent discussion of sex between men that accompanied the ascendancy of middle-class men into social and economic power in the first half of the nineteenth century.

Before Wilde

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