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Joseph Aston

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who submitted to him most of his manuscripts for revision and criticism. In Aston's youth his political views were Liberal and favoured reform, but in later life he wrote in a Conservative spirit. His wife, by whom he had children including a daughter, survived him; she died 20 July 1852.
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from 1770; by 1811 William Aston & Son were gunsmiths at 53 King's Street. In October 1790 Joseph Aston married Elizabeth Preston, also of Manchester. In 1803 he opened a stationer's shop at 84 Deansgate, where on 1 January 1805 he issued the prospectus of the
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According to R. W. Procter his correspondence with Montgomery began in 1793 and lasted 34 years. They first met in 1797 at Buxton from where they visited Castleton; they visited each other on several occasions thereafter – Procter (1874), p.
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enumerates Aston's "newspapers, books, and plays" but omits "his pamphlets and reprints on local history" as being too numerous in chapter XIII, Literary Deansgate of his
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Metrical Records of Manchester, in which its History is traced (currente calamo) from the days of the ancient Britons to the present time,
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published at sixpence and professing "no political creed". From 1809 till 1825 he was publisher and editor of a conservative journal, the
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He himself was a facile writer of verses, the majority of which appeared in his own paper. Of his dramatic pieces,
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on 19 October 1844, and was buried at Tonge, adjoining Middleton. Aston was the friend and executor of
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The Manchester Guide: a brief historical description of the towns of Manchester & Salford,
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1816 (facsimile reprint of 1st ed., Manchester: Joseph Aston, 1816: Manchester: Morten, 1969
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An Heroic Epistle from the Quadruple Obelisk in the Market Place to the New Exchange,
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History and Description of the Collegiate Church of Christ, Manchester
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His published works nearly all relate to Manchester. They include
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He was the son of William Aston (died 1826), gunsmith, of
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and then retired to live at Chadderton Hall. He died at
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Index

references
inline citations
improve
introducing
Learn how and when to remove this message
Deansgate
Manchester
Chadderton Hall
Thomas Barritt
James Montgomery
Theatre Royal, Manchester
ISBN
0901598011
Richard Wright Procter
public domain
Aston, Joseph
Dictionary of National Biography
Categories
English dramatists and playwrights
Writers from Manchester
English male journalists
1762 births
1844 deaths
Burials in Greater Manchester
English male dramatists and playwrights

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