Thomas Ashton (industrialist)

Thomas Ashton (8 December 1818 – 21 January 1898) was an English cotton manufacturer and philanthropist.

Thomas Ashton (1818–1898)

Early life

Ashton was born on 8 December 1818 at Flowery Fields House, Hyde, then in Cheshire, sixth child to Thomas Ashton (1775–1845)[1] and his wife, Harriet, née Booth.

The Ashton family[2] owned mills in Hyde, Godley and Gerrards Wood which employed many hundreds of people. They were among the earliest cotton pioneers in Hyde. From 1800 they worked as a family business with mills at Gerrards Wood and Wilson Brook at Godley. Six brothers were involved in the business which, as well as coal and cotton, also established the calico printing works at Newton Bank. In 1823 the brothers separated, Samuel and Thomas taking the major shares; the former establishing himself at Apethorn Mill and soon after building Woodley Mill, while Thomas ran the factory at the Hollow.[3] The Ashtons were particularly noted for running mills that did both spinning and weaving, a successful practice when most mills concentrated on one process.

Career

Thomas had inherited the cotton mills and the merchants' business in Manchester, 1845, and maintained the expansion programme initiated by his father, making the Flowery Fields mills complex[4] the largest industrial concern in the district. The mills were considered to be 'The best of their class in the country, thoroughly equipped and conducted with every regard for the comfort and welfare of the operatives' (Bedford, Ashtons of Hyde).[5]

Not only did Thomas carry on the Ashton family tradition he had inherited as an employer—that of an employer who realised his responsibilities to the men and women who worked for him—he improved on it. He enlarged the mill school, built a church at Flowery Fields, and expanded the village built by his father; he also established scholarships at the Hyde Mechanics' Institute and the technical school which enabled students to go to Owens College[6] and to the Manchester Mechanics Institute.[7] Care of his employees had always been an important factor to him, and during the cotton famine, when many mills were closed and most employers ruined, Thomas Ashton made sure that his mills never stopped.

In spite of immense personal and financial loss, he kept his workforce in full employment by setting them to work in his brickworks and building Throstle Bank Mill.[8] Following his move to Ford Bank in Didsbury, Ashton maintained his strong links with the town of Hyde. He took a very active part in local politics, and succeeded in obtaining the charter of incorporation in 1881 for Hyde.

He was one of the first radicals elected to Hyde town council, and at the first meeting of the new authority, he was elected as alderman and also first mayor of Hyde[9] in recognition of his work. He funded many projects and was also an active member of the Manchester branch of the National Educational League, which did much to prepare the way for the passing of the 1870 act. His work on the Hyde Relief Committee was one of the reasons that the city council gave him the freedom of the city in 1892.

As well as his many activities in Hyde and Manchester, Ashton served as High Sheriff of Lancashire[10] and also as a magistrate for Cheshire and Lancashire. He was a leading member of the Liberal Party in Manchester. In 1882 he declined a baronetcy offered to him by William Gladstone,[11] who became a close friend and who stayed at his Ford Bank home[12] when he came to Manchester.

Death and legacy

Thomas Ashton died at Ford Bank, Didsbury, on 21 January 1898, and was buried at Hyde Chapel three days later.

Due to the nature of his work, in particular his concern for his work force during the cotton famine,[13] Professor Neil Bourne and Professor Andrew Curran[14] decided to use his name when creating the Thomas Ashton Institute for Risk and Regulatory Research at the University of Manchester, an interdisciplinary research institute concerned with the understanding of failures that occur in the world of work leading to injury or ill-health.

Family

With his wife Elizabeth Ashton née Gair, Ashton had nine children: Harriet G. Ashton; Elizabeth M. Ashton; Katharine Ashton; Margaret Ashton; Grace Mary Ashton; Charlotte Jane Ashton; Thomas Gair Ashton and William Mark Ashton. Thomas Gair Ashton, an industrialist and politician, later became the first 1st Baron Ashton of Hyde. Margaret Ashton was a local politician, elected member of Manchester City Council in 1908. Charlotte Jane Ashton married Sir Edward Tootal Broadhurst, 1st Baronet, a director and eventually chairman of Tootal Broadhurst Lee.

References

  1. "Thomas Ashton, Cotton Manufacturer". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  2. "Ashton Brothers and Co". Graces Guide. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  3. "The Hollow Factory, Hyde". Hydonian Blogspot. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  4. "Flowery Fields Mill Complex". Tameside.
  5. "Annals of Hyde and District". Archive.org. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  6. "Owens College, University of Manchester". University of Manchester. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  7. "Archive of the Manchester Mechanics' Institute". Jisc. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  8. "Throstle Bank Mill". Tameside.gov. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  9. "Thomas Ashton, first mayor of Hyde - 1881". Tameside.gov. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  10. "The High Sherrifs of Lancashire 1129 - 1947" (PDF). Holt Ancestry. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  11. "Images of Thomas Ashton at Ford Bank when Mr Gladstone visited". Ford Bank Residents Association. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  12. "History of Ford Bank". Ford Bank Residents Association. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  13. Shapely, Peter (2001). "Urban charity, class relations and social cohesion: charitable responses to the Cotton Famine". Urban History. 28 (1): 46–64. doi:10.1017/S096392680100013X. JSTOR 44613207. PMID 19213159. S2CID 21999633.
  14. "Directors of the Thomas Ashton Institute". Thomas Ashton Institute. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
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