Academic literature on the topic 'Town Hall (Manchester, England)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Town Hall (Manchester, England)"

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Cunniffe, Steve, and Terry Wyke. "Memorializing its Hero: Liberal Manchesters Statue of Oliver Cromwell." Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 89, no. 1 (March 2012): 179–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/bjrl.89.1.8.

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Oliver Cromwells historical reputation underwent significant change during the nineteenth century. Writers such as Thomas Carlyle were prominent in this reassessment, creating a Cromwell that found particular support among Nonconformists in the north of England. Projects to memorialize Cromwell included the raising of public statues. This article traces the history of the Manchester statue, the first major outdoor statue of Cromwell to be unveiled in the country. The project originated among Manchester radical Liberal Nonconformists in the early 1860s but was not realized until 1875. It was the gift of Elizabeth Heywood; the sculptor was Matthew Noble. The project, including its intended site in Manchesters new Town Hall, was contentious, exposing political and religious divisions within the community, reinforcing the view that the reassessment of Cromwells place in the making of modern Britain was far from settled.
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Minford, Patrick. "Monetary Union: A Desperate Gamble." Journal of the Staple Inn Actuarial Society 33, S1 (1998): 63–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020269x00010720.

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Dr Tim Bunch (President, Manchester Actuarial Society): Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to Manchester Town Hall for this special meeting of the Manchester Actuarial Society, which is being held to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the actuarial profession in the UK.I should like to welcome particularly various guests. There are guests invited by the Manchester Actuarial Society, and also guests of actuarial firms in the north of England. I would particularly like to welcome Paul Thornton, the current President of the Institute.Our speaker today is Professor Patrick Minford, who is Professor of Economics at Cardiff Business School, which is at the University of Wales. He has been in that position since October 1997. Prior to that, he was Professor of Economics at Liverpool University, and he maintains his contacts with the University of Liverpool through being Director of the Liverpool research group in macro-economics. He has held economic positions in a number of places, including HM Treasury, at Manchester University and at the National Institute for Economic and Social Research.
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McHugh, Meg. "A Cross-Disciplinary Approach to the Conservation of Manchester Town Hall." Studies in Conservation 65, sup1 (June 12, 2020): P221—P224. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00393630.2020.1774103.

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Crompton, Andrew. "Manchester Black and Blue." Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 89, no. 1 (March 2012): 277–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/bjrl.89.1.11.

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In living memory, Manchester was black from air pollution caused by burning coal. Today only fragments of that blackness remain, although its former presence can be inferred from precautions taken at the time to protect buildings from soot. At Canal Street in Miles Platting the colouring caused by consuming coal was blue, the result of contamination with a by-product of the purification of coal-gas. It is argued that because the blue street can be seen as beautiful then so can the black walls, which should be treated as an authentic part of the city. The most significant remains are 22 Lever Street and the inner courtyards of the Town Hall, which ought to be preserved in their dirty state.
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Fellows-Jensen, Gillian. "Place-names as a reflection of cultural interaction." Anglo-Saxon England 19 (December 1990): 13–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263675100001575.

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In a series of sketches by Elizabeth Gaskell, which appeared in Charles Dickens's weekly periodical Household Words between 1851 and 1853, the small Cheshire town of Knutsford was immortalized under the name Cranford. Mrs Gaskell, who had spent most of her childhood in Knutsford, knew the town and its inhabitants intimately and she returned to it as the setting for some of her later works, in which she called it ‘Eccleston’, ‘Dunscombe’ and ‘Hollingford’. Each of these four fictional names is convincing enough as the name of a small provincial town. Three of the names, indeed, are borne by settlements elsewhere in England, and the fourth, ‘Hollingford’, is close enough in form to the genuine names Hollington and Hollingworth to be acceptable. On her marriage, Elizabeth Gaskell had moved from Knutsford to Manchester and she exploited this commercial city, too, as the setting for some of her works. Her first published novel, Mary Barton (1848), actually bore the subtitle ‘A Tale of Manchester Life’, but in later works the city appears under the fictional names ‘Drumble’ and ‘Milton’. Milton is a name which occurs quite frequently in England, although never as the name of a large city. Drumble is an artificial name – presumably a portmanteau word containing the words drear and rumble, which antedates Lewis Carroll's first exploitation of this device in a handwritten version of the poem Jabberwocky from 1855. Elizabeth Gaskell is not the only author to have coined a fictional name for Manchester in the course of time. Charles Dickens referred to it as ‘Coketown’ in Hard Times (1854), for example, and Louis Golding as ‘Doomington’ in Magnolia Street (1931).
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Bishop, Michael J., and Michael F. Stanley. "Bruynzeel systems in use: 2, Buxton Museum." Geological Curator 4, no. 9 (November 1987): 548–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.55468/gc863.

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Buxton Museum and Art Gallery is stone-built, arranged on two floors, and part of a Grade II listed 1875 hydro. Buxton is the highest market town in England and receives more precipitation than Manchester, giving generally high levels of relative humidity (Rh) throughout the year. This fact, coupled with structural dampness in both the main store and the cellar (Fig.l) (which housed the Quaternary Bone collections until 1979) had caused concern for many years.
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Lannon, David. "Manchester’s New Fleet Prison or House of Correction and Other Gaols for Obstinate Recusants." Recusant History 29, no. 4 (October 2009): 459–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s003419320001236x.

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Few people today realise that Manchester was used in Elizabethan England as a place where obstinate recusants might be imprisoned both as a warning to others and in the hope that their conformity to the religious laws of the realm might be obtained. Three places were used to hold the captives. The first was the disused chapel on the only bridge that then existed between Manchester and Salford, the second was Radcliffe Hall or Pool Fold Lodge near the present day Cross Street Chapel, and the third was the House of Correction built between Hunt’s Bank and the sandstone bluff on which stood the former collegiate buildings, today the home of Chetham’s Library and world famous School of Music.
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Stewart, Murray. "Between Whitehall and Town Hall: the realignment of urban regeneration policy in England." Policy & Politics 22, no. 2 (April 1, 1994): 133–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/030557394782453735.

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Rhi, Mikyung. "Extraordinary Histories by Ordinary Folks: A Study on Ford Madox Brown’s Murals in Manchester Town Hall." Journal of the Association of Western Art History 54 (February 28, 2021): 109–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.16901/jawah.2021.02.54.109.

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Shorrocks, Graham. "Glottalization and Gemination In an English Urban Dialect." Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique 33, no. 1 (March 1988): 59–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008413100012652.

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The following is an account of glottalization and gemination in the traditional vernacular of the Greater Bolton area. Bolton is a town situated 12 miles north-west of Manchester in northwestern England. The Greater Bolton area consists of the county borough of Bolton, Farnworth municipal borough, and the urban districts of Horwich, Turton, Little Lever and Kearsley. Its population is approximately 230,000.From a consideration of various historical, industrial, economic, social and administrative factors, the Greater Bolton area can be shown to be a relatively homogeneous cultural unit within the urban field of influence of Bolton. This cultural homogeneity is reflected in the speech of the area, which is also relatively homogeneous in character, and distinctive when compared to the speech of other parts of Greater Manchester County, South Lancashire and Merseyside (cf. Shorrocks 1980:1–27).
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Books on the topic "Town Hall (Manchester, England)"

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Mark, Liniado, and National Trust, eds. The National Trust Centenary Countryside Conference proceedings: 25-28 September 1995 at Manchester Town Hall, Manchester. Cirencester: National Trust, 1995.

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Birmingham Town Hall: An architectural history. Farnham, UK: Lund Humphries, 2012.

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Atkinson, David K. Morley Town Hall: A history and description. Leeds: Morley Local HistorySociety, 1995.

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Dams, Jeanne M. Trouble in the town hall. New York: HarperPaperbacks, 1998.

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Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society., ed. Manchester conservation: The way forward : proceedings of a seminar held in the Town Hall, Manchester Saturday, 1st November, 1986. Manchester: Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society, 1987.

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Thomas, Philip. Built to music: The making of the Bridgewater Hall. Manchester: Manchester City Council, 1996.

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Honri, Peter. John Wilton's music hall: The handsomest room in town. Hornchurch: Ian Henry, 1985.

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Dams, Jeanne M. Trouble in the town hall: A Dorothy Martin mystery. New York: Walker, 1996.

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International Conference on Urban and Community Forestry (3rd 1993 Manchester). A seed in time: Proceedings : the third International Conference on Urban and Community Forestry, Manchester Town Hall, August 31st - September 2nd 1993. Edited by Chambers Karen and Sangster Marcus. Edinburgh: Forestry Commission, 1994.

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Degen, Monica Montserrat. Sensing cities: Regenerating public life in Barcelona and Manchester. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Town Hall (Manchester, England)"

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Gash, Norman. "Town And Country." In Robert Surtees and Early Victorian Society, 42–65. Oxford University PressOxford, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198204299.003.0003.

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Abstract In his novels Surtees ignores industrial Britain. He has no interest in the cotton operatives of Manchester, the out-workers of Birmingham, the handloom workers of Spitalfields; none in Chartism, or the distress and rioting of 1842. The nearest he comes to the problems of the Industrial Revolution is in Hillingdon Hall, where much of the plot revolves round the intervention of an AntiCorn Law candidate in a local parliamentary election. Yet it would be wrong to conclude that this omission makes him less representative of his age than, for instance, Charles Dickens or Mrs Gaskell. In his lifetime England remained a largely rural and agricultural country-provided, that is to say, the criterion is not statistics of manufacture and commerce but how people lived and what they saw around them in their daily lives.
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"Hard Spheres and Pictograms, The First Concrete Atomic Theory: John Dalton (Northern England and Manchester)." In Traveling with the Atom A Scientific Guide to Europe and Beyond, 76–98. The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/9781788015288-00076.

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John Dalton started his scientific career as a meteorological observer and chronicler but soon expanded his interest to investigate the components of ordinary air. We describe his early life and education, his formulation of the Laws of Partial Pressures and Multiple Proportions, and his famous atomic theory (1808) that incorporated Lavoisier's Law of Conservation of Mass, Proust's Law of Definite Proportion and the Greek ideas of indivisible atoms. We discuss his colorblindness (“daltonism”), the symbols he invented to represent atoms and molecules (“pictographs”), his table of atomic weights, and how he used his own data and that gathered by his pneumatic predecessors Black, Davy, and Priestley to advance his ideas. Unfortunately, his adherence to a “rule of greatest simplicity” hindered the establishment of accurate tables of atomic weights for half a century. The many sites described include his birthplace in Eaglesfield, the Quaker Meeting House in Pardshaw Hall, the Stramongate School and the Quaker Tapestry House in Kendall, and the many sites in Manchester, including his statue and the Ford Madox Brown mural in the Manchester Town Hall, and the Dalton manuscripts available for viewing in the John Rylands Library.
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Lerum, Vidar. "Manchester Town Hall." In Sustainable Building Design, 96–107. Routledge, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315736266-11.

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"Manchester Town Hall 1868." In The Buildings Around Us, 41–45. Taylor & Francis, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203362259-14.

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Underwood, Jason, Joanna Chomeniuk, Liam Brady, and David Woodcock. "Manchester Central Library and Town Hall Extension Project." In Advances in Construction ICT and e-Business, 131–52. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315690698-7.

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Gustafson, Sandra M. "The Town Hall Meeting." In Democracies in America, 115–26. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198865698.003.0011.

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Abstract The philosopher John Dewey summed up the legacy of the New England town hall meeting for American democracy in his book The Public and Its Problems (1927). Dewey’s vision built on an influential nineteenth-century tradition—one including the historian George Bancroft and the philosopher John Stuart Mill—that understood American democracy as the outgrowth of the town hall meeting, and his work continues to resonate in twentieth- and twenty-first-century efforts to recast it for modern institutions and media. Importantly supplementing Dewey is the work of Reconstruction-era author and activist Albion Tourgée, who saw the town hall meeting as a means to achieve racial justice. Following Dewey and Tourgée’s discussions, and with reference to analogous elements of the Chautauqua system, this essay concludes by asking if a twenty-first-century town hall meeting system could be sustained with universities at the center and a university-to-society pipeline created to enhance graduate involvement in civic life.
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Lucas, Scott. "‘The consent of the body of the whole realme’: Edward Hall’s parliamentary history." In Writing the history of parliament in Tudor and early Stuart England, 60–76. Manchester University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9780719099588.003.0003.

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Modern scholars have often presented Henry VIII and his chief ministers as the prime movers behind the reform of religion in 1530s England. Edward Hall, a Protestant-minded MP in the Reformation parliament, sharply contested this view in his chronicle, The Union of the Two Noble and Illustrious Families of Lancaster and York (1548). Hall presented not the king, but parliamentarians in general and the burgesses of the House of Commons in particular as the true driving forces behind statutory ecclesiastical reform. Insisting upon a pre-existing widespread zeal for reform among his fellow MPs and suppressing almost all sense of the strong support for the clergy expressed by the Commons’ more conservative members, Hall made the Henrician Reformation above all parliament’s Reformation. Hall’s Chronicle therefore broadens our appreciation of the significance of history in the thinking of England’s first generation of reformers.
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"‘Manchester Illustrated – Bird’s eye view of the city from the new Town Hall tower’, 1876." In Routledge Historical Resources - 19th Century British Society. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367030278-hobs172-1.

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Fraser, Derek. "Local: Leeds in the age of great cities." In Leeds and its Jewish community, 23–34. Manchester University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526123084.003.0003.

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This chapter explores Leeds as one of the shock cities of the Industrial Revolution, which experienced massive population growth in the nineteenth century. The new industrial classes challenged the old merchant elite and sought political power. The 1832 election, the first time Leeds gained parliamentary representation, was an important statement about the new urban society. The building of the Town Hall was an expression of civic pride and Queen Victoria opened it.
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Jennings, Stuart B. "Controlling disease in a civil-war garrison town: military discipline or civic duty? The surviving evidence for Newark-upon-Trent, 1642–46." In Battle-scarred, 40–54. Manchester University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526124807.003.0003.

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Across England, between 1642 and 1648, numerous towns found themselves garrisoned. Whilst some issues were clearly military matters, relationships between civic authorities and garrison commanders over more generic matters often proved to be fraught. One such issue where responsibility was unclear was in the response to the arrival of endemic disease, such as typhus or plague, which impacted on all in a garrison town and where a degree of coordinated action was required to limit the spread of infection: who took charge, how and where were the infected treated and quarantined and who met the cost (both financial and logistical) in such situations? A rare survival of civilian sources from the town of Newark enables an exploration of some of the issues within this garrison town.
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Conference papers on the topic "Town Hall (Manchester, England)"

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Kiviniemi, Arto, and Ricardo Codinhoto. "Challenges in the Implementation of BIM for FM—Case Manchester Town Hall Complex." In 2014 International Conference on Computing in Civil and Building Engineering. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784413616.083.

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