Hugh Hornby Birley

For the Manchester MP, see Hugh Birley.
Hugh Hornby Birley.

Hugh Hornby Birley (10 March 1778 – 31 July 1845) was a leading Manchester millowner and Tory who is reputed to have led the fatal charge of the Manchester and Salford Yeomanry at the Peterloo Massacre on 16 August 1819.

He was the son of Richard Birley (1743–1812), merchant, who had four sons and four daughters. Hugh's brother, Joseph Birley (1782–1847), was the father of Hugh Birley who served as Member of Parliament for Manchester from 1868 to 1883.[1]

In 1814 he commenced the building of the Cambridge Street Cotton Mill in Chorlton-on-Medlock. He was a local magistrate and one of the commanders of the Manchester & Salford Yeomanry responsible for the Peterloo Massacre at St Peter's Field in 1819. [2]

He assisted the Swiss inventor-engineer Johann Georg Bodmer by making space available to him at his Chorlton Mills and was instrumental in founding the Royal Victoria Gallery of Practical Science in 1839.[3] He was associated with the Royal Manchester Institution[4] and a moving force in the establishment of Owens College.[5] He was a director of the Manchester Gas Works and became a business associate of Charles Macintosh with the intention of putting the works' waste products to profitable use in the manufacture of waterproof fabrics.[6]

Hugh Hornby Birley died in 1845 and was buried in the family vault in St. Peter's Church, Manchester. he had married Cecily Hornby (1797-1843) of Kirkham, with whom he had four sons.[2]

References

Notes
  1. David and Linda Birley Genealogies, 2002–4, archived from the original ( Scholar search) on 23 November 2005, retrieved 10 August 2007 Check date values in: |date= (help) - features references to primary sources
  2. 1 2 "Hugh Hornby Birley". Graces's Guide. Retrieved 26 April 2016.
  3. Kargon 1977, pp. 36–38
  4. Kargon 1977, p. 41
  5. Kargon 1977, p. 154
  6. Kargon 1977, p. 137
Bibliography
  • Kargon, R. H. (1977), Science in Victorian Manchester: Enterprise and Expertise, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN 0-8018-1969-5 
  • Lobban, M. (1990), "From seditious libel to unlawful assembly: Peterloo and the changing face of political crime c1770–1820", Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 10 (3): 307–352, doi:10.1093/ojls/10.3.307 
  • Walmsley, Robert (1969), Peterloo: The Case Re-opened, Manchester University Press, ISBN 0-7190-0392-X 

External links


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