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Encyclopedia > Abel Heywood

Abel Heywood (February 25, 1810 _ August 19, 1893) was an English publisher, radical and sometime mayor of Manchester.


Starting work at nine-years old, Heywood was an energetic autodidact who, following a summary dismissal by his manufacturing employer, set up a penny reading room in Manchester. He soon developed the enterprise into publishing a newspaper but refused to pay the stamp duty intended to supress mass publishing. Even though subject to heavy fines, he continued his commitment to inexpensive newspapers.


Despite his radical leanings, his business prospered and he was able to be active in public life, becoming commissioner of police in 1836. He campaigned actively for the incorporation of the city and, once this was achieved, was elected to the council in 1843. He served as alderman in 1853 and was twice mayor.


His first term was in 1862-1863, during the cotton famine, then in 1876_1877. He stood unsuccesfully for Parliament for the Liberal Party in 1859 and 1865. A major achievement was his role in guiding Manchester Town Hall to its completion.




  Results from FactBites:
 
Sir Robert Peel, Abel Heywood and Thomas Fleming - Manchester Policians and Social Reformers (1348 words)
Abel Heywood was born in 1810 to a poor family in Prestwich.
His father's death when Heywood was only 5 resulted in him having received very little formal education, and at the age of 9 years he was apprenticed to the Thomas Worthington warehouse in High Street in Manchester for the princely sum of 1s.6d (7.5pence) a week.
Abel Heywood died in 1893 aged 84 years, and is buried at his residence "Summerfield" in Rose Hill, Bowden, There is a statue of him in Manchester Town Hall.
Stephen Heywood, 37; he opened his life to other ALS patients - The Boston Globe (766 words)
During the past several years, Stephen Heywood allowed stem cells to be injected into his spinal column, participated in clinical trials for new drugs and genetic studies, and received a brain implant as part of an experiment in how thoughts can be used to control a wheelchair and other robotic objects.
Heywood was diagnosed with ALS in 1998 and returned to Newton.
Heywood and other patients to share their disease progression and treatment regimens online.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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