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  2. Edward Baines (1800–1890) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Baines_(1800–1890)

    A Companion to the Lakes of Cumberland, Westmoreland, and Lancashire: in a descriptive account of a family tour and excursions on horseback and on foot: with a new, copious, and correct itinerary (3rd ed.). Simpkin and Marshall. Baines, Edward (1835). History of the Cotton Manufacture. H. Fisher, R. Fisher, P. Jackson. Baines, Edward (1843).

  3. Museum of Lancashire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Lancashire

    Baines' 1825 History and Directory of Lancashire comments that, 'The prison is on a very large scale, but the Court-house, which is inconveniently situated in the centre of the building, is not sufficiently commodious, and at the general session for the county, held by adjournment on 9 September 1824, the sum of ten thousand pounds was voted by ...

  4. Edwin Butterworth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Butterworth

    Butterworth was the tenth and youngest child of the topographer James Butterworth, and was born at Pitses, near Oldham, in 1812. He followed in the footsteps of his father, whom he assisted in his later works, but was more given to statistical research. When Edward Baines undertook the preparation of a history of Lancashire, he found a useful ...

  5. Edward Baines (1774–1848) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Baines_(1774–1848)

    Margaret Baines (d. 1891) Charlotte (1800–1890) Edward Baines (1774–1848) was the editor and proprietor of the Leeds Mercury (which, by his efforts, became the leading provincial paper in England), politician, and the author of historical and geographic works of reference. On his death in 1848, the Leeds Intelligencer (a rival of the ...

  6. Thomas Highs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Highs

    A drawing of Thomas Highs' spinning jenny, taken from Edward Baines's History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain. Thomas Highs (1718–1803), of Leigh, Lancashire, was a reed-maker [1] [2] and manufacturer of cotton carding and spinning engines in the 1780s, during the Industrial Revolution.

  7. History of Lancashire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Lancashire

    Lancashire is a county of England, in the northwest of the country. The county did not exist in 1086, for the Domesday Book, and was apparently first created in 1182, [1] making it one of the youngest of the traditional counties. The historic county consisted of two separate parts.

  8. Baines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baines

    Charlie Baines (1896–1954), English footballer. Chris Baines (born 1947), English gardener, naturalist, television presenter and author. Edward Baines (1774–1848), English newspaper-proprietor and politician. Edward Baines (1800–1890), son of the above, also a nonconformist English newspaper editor and Member of Parliament.

  9. History of Leeds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Leeds

    History of Leeds. J. M. W. Turner 's 1816 painting of Leeds, from Beeston Hill. At the left-hand edge is Marshall's Mill, in the centre is Trinity Church, and further to the right, through the smoke, is the tower of Leeds Parish Church, now Leeds Minster. Loidis, from which Leeds, Yorkshire derives its name, was anciently a forested area of the ...