ABSTRACT

First published in 1925. Robert Owen was, in the author’s words, ‘that rarest of phenomena, an utterly disinterested critic of a system by which he had himself risen to greatness’, and in studying his life this work reveals with a remarkable clarity the first phases of the Industrial Revolution crowded as it was with events, changes, ideas, and characters. This title will be of great interest to scholars and students of labour history.

chapter Chapter I|35 pages

Robert Owen and His Times

chapter Chapter II|10 pages

The Child

chapter Chapter III|9 pages

The Shop-Boy

chapter Chapter IV|21 pages

A Romance of Business

chapter Chapter V|14 pages

Manchester—Marriage

chapter Chapter VI|26 pages

New Lanark, 1800–1813

chapter Chapter VII|10 pages

Life at Braxfield

chapter Chapter VIII|21 pages

Ideas on Education

chapter Chapter IX|23 pages

The First Factory Act

chapter Chapter X|28 pages

“Mr. Owen’S Plan”

chapter Chapter XI|8 pages

The Days of Peterloo

chapter Chapter XII|16 pages

Later Years At New Lanark

chapter Chapter XIII|17 pages

The Beginnings of Owenism

chapter Chapter XIV|13 pages

New Harmony

chapter Chapter XV|24 pages

The Labour Exchange and the Builders’ Guild

chapter Chapter XVI|17 pages

The “Trades Union”

chapter Chapter XVII|19 pages

Old Age

chapter Chapter XVIII|11 pages

Conclusion