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Joseph Adshead (1800–1861) was an English merchant, reformer and pamphleteer from Manchester. ==Life== Born in Ross, Herefordshire, Adshead worked as an estate agent and merchant. He settled in Manchester around 1820.〔Alan Powers, '' Vol. 24, (1981) , pp. 103–123, at p. 120 note 15. Published by: SAHGB Publications Limited. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1568402〕 In 1835 he was part of the consortium developing Victoria Park, Manchester. He was declared bankrupt in 1839, described as a "wholesale hosier". In 1839 also, he went onto the Council of the Anti-Cornlaw League. In 1838 the Night Asylum, a homeless shelter in Henry Street, Manchester, was founded by Adshead and George Wilson of the League, and Adshead continued to act as its treasurer. In 1840–1 Adshead was involved with the British India Society, and moved in abolitionist circles. He became secretary of a branch, the Northern Central British India Society, after a visit to Manchester by Joseph Pease. He had worked with George Thompson at the end of 1840 to see its journal ''The British Indian Advocate'' issued.〔Anna M. Stoddart, ''Elizabeth Pease Nichol'' (1899), p. 111 and pp. 122–3; (archive.org (1) ) and (archive.org (2) ).〕 He was in the US shortly afterwards, calling on James and Lucretia Mott in Philadelphia on 16 February 1841.〔Anna Davis Hallowell (ed.), ''James and Lucretia Mott: Life and Letters'' (1884), p. 194; (archive.org. )〕 In March he sailed back from Boston, where he knew William Lloyd Garrison, with a letter destined for Elizabeth Pease. Adshead became a member of Manchester Corporation, serving as Alderman for St. Anne's Ward.〔William E. A. Axon (ed.), ''The Annals of Manchester: a chronological record from the earliest times to the end of 1885'' (1886)(p. 283. )〕〔 He also took up public causes in the health sector. He supported the Health of Towns Association, and homoeopathy. He advocated the rebuilding out of town of the Manchester Lunatic Asylum, in the early 1840s when its future was in play. At the end of his life he was lobbying for a convalescent hospital in the Manchester area. He died on 15 February 1861, at Withington. He was a correspondent of Florence Nightingale, a contact through Richard Cobden, and after his death she wrote in a letter that he was "my best pupil". ''The Bottle'', George Cruikshank's set of eight temperance engravings, was dedicated to Adshead.〔Wilfrid Hugh Chesson, ''George Cruikshank'' (1908), p. 256;(archive.org. )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Joseph Adshead」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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