Mary Barton, first novel by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell, published in 1848. It is the story of a working-class family that descends into desperation during the depression of 1839. With its vivid description of squalid slums, Mary Barton helped awaken the national conscience.
John Barton is a respected labourer who is thrown out of work during hard times. He becomes a union organizer, and he journeys to London with other reformers to present the Chartist petition to Parliament. The unionists get short shrift from government and management, and John’s frustration turns to bitter class hatred. He is chosen to carry out a retaliatory murder at the behest of his trade union. His victim is Henry Carson, a mill owner’s son who has been paying court to Mary, John’s daughter. Mary’s working-class lover, Jem Wilson, is indicted for the crime, but Mary helps prove his innocence. John Barton dies, his constitution broken by poverty, remorse, and opium. Mary, Jem, and their friends immigrate to Canada to begin a new life.