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.[1] He settled in Manchester around 1820.[2]
In 1835 he was part of the consortium developing Victoria Park, Manchester.[3] He was declared bankrupt in 1839, described as a "wholesale hosier".[4][5] In 1839 also, he went onto the Council of the Anti-Cornlaw League.[6] 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.[7][8]
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.[9] He was in the US shortly afterwards, calling on James and Lucretia Mott in Philadelphia on 16 February 1841.[10] In March he sailed back from Boston, where he knew William Lloyd Garrison, with a letter destined for Elizabeth Pease.[11]
Adshead was one of the defendant directors in the landmark case Foss v Harbottle (1843) 67 ER 189, which established the precedent that where a wrong is alleged to have been done to a company, the proper claimant is the company itself.
Prison Discipline: The Fallacies of The Times (1844)[19]
As a penal reformer, Adshead supported the system of Francis Lieber,[20] and defended the separate system.[21] In Prisons and Prisoners (1845),[22] he described the Eastern State Penitentiary.[23] This work also contained an attack on the views of prisons expressed by Charles Dickens.[24] Adshead argued, influentially, that what Dickens had written in his American Notes (1842) on the "Pennsylvania system" was fiction, and could not be taken seriously as commentary.[25] He also characterised the Eighteenth Annual Report of the Board of Managers of the Boston Prison Discipline Society (1843) on the matters at issue as a "flagrant instance of trickery".[26] A sequel was Our Present Gaol System Deeply Depraving to the Prisoner and a Positive Evil to the Community: Some Remedies Proposed (1847).[27] In it Adshead commented favourably on the positive effect of the separate system on prisoners who were then to be transported to Port Phillip in Australia.[28]
On Juvenile Criminals, Reformatories, and the Means of Rendering the Perishing and Dangerous Classes serviceable to the State (1856), paper given to the Manchester Statistical Society.[29] Adshead gave a further paper to the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science meeting in Liverpool in 1858 on "Reformatory and industrial schools, their comparative economy".[30] He considered the finances of ten each of reformatories, ragged schools and industrial schools.[31] Adshead was critical of Parkhurst, the prison for young offenders, though he did not take the same view of it as Mary Carpenter.[32]
Other works
A Circumstantial Narrative of the Wreck of the Rothsay Castle Steampacket: On Her Passage from Liverpool to Beaumaris, 17 August 1831 (1834)[33] The Rothsay Castle was shipwrecked at the east end of the Menai Straits.
Distress in Manchester (1842).[34] This work contained a contribution from Richard Baron Howard on contagious disease.[35] Adshead made a connection between prostitution and social change driven by industrial development.[36]
Twenty-Four Illustrated Maps of the Township of Manchester (1851);[37]available online.
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