Samuel Bamford, autobiographer, cultural historian, journalist, poet, political agitator and weaver, was born on 28 February 1788 in Middleton, near Rochdale in Lancashire, the fourth child of a cotton spinner and a boot-maker's daughter. He began as a weaver, learning his trade as a boy, before becoming, briefly, a sailor then a warehouseman. In 1810, after marrying his lover Jemima Shepherd (Mima), with whom he already had a child (Ann who he described as his “love child”), he returned to weaving. Bamford was proud of his trade, as the title of his first collection of poems, The Weaver Boy attests
The Peterloo massacre of 16 August 1819 is mainly known to students of Romantic period verse through...
Author Elizabeth Uter reads her short story about Mingo, a young Black man whom Samuel Pepys encount...
By Robert J. Gemmett, College at Brockport Faculty emeritus. Biography of William Beckford, was an E...
Samuel Bamford is best known for his political autobiography, Passages in the Life of a Radical, reg...
Samuel Bamford (1788-1872) is best known as the Lancashire weaver whose Passages in the Life of a Ra...
Samuel Bamford (1788-1872) is not only one of Lancashire’s most famous sons but also one of England’...
Samuel Bamford's "Passages in the Life of a Radical" (1842) and "Early Days" (1848) are among the mo...
James Butterworth (1771-1837) was an outstanding product of the autodidact tradition. A weaver with ...
James Butterworth (1771-1837) was an outstanding product of the autodidact tradition. A weaver with ...
From the captions on some of his English prints, Chaloner Smith (and the DNB) inferred that his fath...
When, in 1820, Samuel Bradshaw, a bachelor and a weaver, led a party of men, women and children from...
A written piece detailing the impact of Samuel Slater on the rural towns of Southern Worcester Count...
William Morris was a writer, designer, and political activist. One of the early exponents of the aes...
This is the story of James Kay's invention of a novel wet spinning system for flax in 1825, which wa...
Usually counted among the first generation of rigorously academic historians in Britain, Frederick Y...
The Peterloo massacre of 16 August 1819 is mainly known to students of Romantic period verse through...
Author Elizabeth Uter reads her short story about Mingo, a young Black man whom Samuel Pepys encount...
By Robert J. Gemmett, College at Brockport Faculty emeritus. Biography of William Beckford, was an E...
Samuel Bamford is best known for his political autobiography, Passages in the Life of a Radical, reg...
Samuel Bamford (1788-1872) is best known as the Lancashire weaver whose Passages in the Life of a Ra...
Samuel Bamford (1788-1872) is not only one of Lancashire’s most famous sons but also one of England’...
Samuel Bamford's "Passages in the Life of a Radical" (1842) and "Early Days" (1848) are among the mo...
James Butterworth (1771-1837) was an outstanding product of the autodidact tradition. A weaver with ...
James Butterworth (1771-1837) was an outstanding product of the autodidact tradition. A weaver with ...
From the captions on some of his English prints, Chaloner Smith (and the DNB) inferred that his fath...
When, in 1820, Samuel Bradshaw, a bachelor and a weaver, led a party of men, women and children from...
A written piece detailing the impact of Samuel Slater on the rural towns of Southern Worcester Count...
William Morris was a writer, designer, and political activist. One of the early exponents of the aes...
This is the story of James Kay's invention of a novel wet spinning system for flax in 1825, which wa...
Usually counted among the first generation of rigorously academic historians in Britain, Frederick Y...
The Peterloo massacre of 16 August 1819 is mainly known to students of Romantic period verse through...
Author Elizabeth Uter reads her short story about Mingo, a young Black man whom Samuel Pepys encount...
By Robert J. Gemmett, College at Brockport Faculty emeritus. Biography of William Beckford, was an E...