Alice Mann (née Burnett; 1791–1865) was a Leeds-born radical and publisher.[1][2] Her husband was arrested on suspicion of involvement in an armed uprising and she served a week long and a six month sentence for selling newspapers without paying the required tax.

Alice Mann
only known portrait
Born
Alice Burnett

1791
Leeds, England
Died1865 (aged 73–74)
Occupation(s)Printer, publisher

Biography

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Alice Burnett was born in Hunslet Lane, Leeds in 1791. In 1807, at the age of 16, she married James Mann, a prominent West Riding political activist and bookseller. James and Alice's book shop in Briggate appeared "to be the head quarters of sedition in this town" according to the Leeds Intelligencer.[3] James Mann died of cholera on 4 August 1832, leaving Alice widowed with nine children. She continued to sell books and added printing to the business.[2]

In 1833 she published an edition of Catechism of the Society for Promoting National Regeneration which aspired "to remove ... the social and commercial evils now existing".[4] She also published work by the agitator Richard Carlile, the radical Richard Oastler and William Rider's[2] spoof life story of the publisher and politician Edward Baines titled The Demagogue.[5]

In 1848 she and William Strange were publishing Mann’s Black Book of the British Aristocracy and she may have been its compiler.[2] The book aimed to expose "the more monstrous abuses in the state and the church".[6]

Politics

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Alice Mann's shop is probably located on the left of this (undated) engraving of the Central Market in Leeds

Mann's husband was arrested in 1817 for his presumed involvement in the armed Pentrich rising which led to several men being executed. Her husband was released without any formal charges being made.[2]

Mann served a prison sentence of a week in Wakefield Prison in 1834 for selling unstamped newspapers.[1] In January 1836 she was found guilty again of the same offence alongside the Chartist Joshua Hobson and she was fined £100. Hobson received a lesser fine of £80.[7] In default of payment they were both imprisoned in York Castle for six months.[8] At the trial Mann declined to pay a reduced fine and escape prison if she ceased book-selling, saying she "had no other mode of maintaining her family".[1]

Mann belonged to a network of radical printers and booksellers, notably Abel Heywood of Manchester and William Strange of London. Alice was involved in the Luddite and Chartist movements,[1] and she is referred to in the chapter 'Chartism in Leeds' in the book Chartist Studies.[9]

Published work

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Mann’s Black Book of the British Aristocracy, 1848
  • Edward Hailstone, Catechism of the Society for Promoting National Regeneration (Alice Mann, 1833)[10]
  • William Rider, The Demagogue (Alice Mann, 1834)[11]
  • Samuel Smiles, History of Ireland and the Irish People (1843). 1844 edition printed by William Strange in London.
  • S. H. Collins, The Emigrant’s Complete Guide to the United States, Australia, Port Stephens, Van Dieman’s Land, New Zealand, the Cape of Good Hope, and Natal; Canada, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia; and the Auckland Islands (3 vols. in 1: 1849–50)[12]
  • Bairnsla Foaks; Annual an Pogmoor Olmenack, be Tom Treddlehoyle (various editions, Alice Mann)[13]
  • Charles Rodgers, Tom Treddlehoyle's Trip to Lunnan, to see Paxton's Great Glass Lantern (various editions, Alice Mann, 1851–53)[14]
  • Edward Hailstone and Charles Rodgers, Tom Treddlehoyle's peep at t'Manchester Art Treasures Exhebishan (Alice Mann, 1857)[15]
  • Edward Hailstone and Alice Mann, Mann's Black Book of the British Aristocracy (1867)[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Leeds Libraries (13 September 2019). "Alice Mann (1791–1865)". The Secret Library | Leeds Libraries Heritage Blog. Retrieved 2022-04-16.
  2. ^ a b c d e Chase, Malcolm (2019). "Mann [née Burnett], Alice (1791–1865), radical and publisher". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. doi:10.1093/odnb/9780198614128.013.369115. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 2022-04-04.
  3. ^ "Reform Meeting". Leeds Intelligencer. 27 September 1819.
  4. ^ Britain), Society for Promoting National Regeneration (Great (1833). Catechism of the Society for Promoting National Regeneration: whose object is, to remove as far as possible, the social and commercial evils now existing, and which by their rapid increase, are fast destroying every vestige of happiness and order. E. Keighley.
  5. ^ Libraries, Leeds (2019-08-09). "Peterloo and After: 19th-century Radicalism in Leeds". The Secret Library | Leeds Libraries Heritage Blog. Retrieved 2022-05-20.
  6. ^ a b Mann, Alice; Hailstone, Edward (1867). Mann's black book of the British aristocracy; or an exposure of the more monstrous abuses in the state and the church; with black lists of pensioners; royal, aristocratic, legal, civil, diplomatic, hereditary, military, clerical, etc. Leeds: A. Mann; Manchester, sold by A. Heywood & J. Heywood; Birmingham, Guest. OCLC 931213189.
  7. ^ "The Hull Packet". 22 January 1836.
  8. ^ Peacock, Alfred James (1969). Bradford Chartism, 1838–1840. Borthwick Publications. ISBN 978-0-900701-03-0.
  9. ^ "Chartism in Leeds". Chartist Ancestors. 25 September 2020. Retrieved 2022-04-16.
  10. ^ Society for Promoting National Regeneration (Great Britain), Hailstone, Edward (1833). Catechism of the Society for Promoting National Regeneration: whose object is, to remove ... the social and commercial evils now existing, and which by their rapid increase, are fast destroying every vestige of happiness and order. Leeds: Printed by Alice Mann. OCLC 931213309.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ The "Demagogue". Leeds: A. Mann. 1834. OCLC 1302218844.
  12. ^ Leeds Libraries (9 March 2021). "Searching for Alice Mann". The Secret Library | Leeds Libraries Heritage Blog. Retrieved 2022-05-15.
  13. ^ Treddlehoyle, Tom; Mann, Alice (n.d.). The Bairnsla foaks' annual: and Pogmoor olmenack. London: T.W. Gratton. OCLC 16291375.
  14. ^ Rodgers, Charles (1853). Tom Treddlehoyle's trip ta Lunnan ta see Paxton's great glass lantern ... Leeds: A. mann. OCLC 41974748.
  15. ^ Rodgers, Charles; Hailstone, Edward (1857). Tom Treddlehoyle's peep at t'Manchester Art Treasures Exhebishan, e 1857; an uther wunderful things beside, at cum in hiz way i' t'city a Manchester. London: T.W. Grattan; Leeds, printed and sold by Alice Mann; Manchester, A. and J. Heywood. OCLC 931340869.

Further reading

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  • Chase, Malcolm (available online to subscribers). 'Mann (née Burnett), Alice', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
  • Thornton, David. Leeds A Biographical Dictionary (Leeds: Beecroft Publications, 2021)