Joseph Ashby
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Joseph Ashby (1859 – 1919) was an agricultural trade unionist born in Tysoe, Warwickshire, England. “His life was remarkable, encapsulating in many aspects the ideal of the self-improving working man, and embracing most of the institutions—the nonconformist chapel, trades unionism, and working-class Liberalism—that so clearly represented social and political betterment in the later years of the nineteenth century.” (Quotation from Alun Howkins, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography). His biography written by his daughter, M. K. Ashby.
Joseph was born 13 Jun 1859, illegitimate son of Elizabeth Ashby, an unmarried servant. M.K. Ashby describes Joseph’s father as from “A family of very high rank, great landowners of in Warwickshire and neighbouring counties... with some, though not great, achievement in science and letters". (MK Ashby's notes deposited at the Warwicksire CRO suggest the family was the Comptons - Marquesses of Northampton, whom indeed Joseph had contacts with throughout his life).
Joseph left school at eleven and worked on a farm in Tysoe before being employed in quarrying in nearby Hornton. Later he worked as a builder at Compton Wynyates; it was while here that he first came into contact with William Compton, 5th Marquess of Northampton.
Elizabeth bought up Joseph as Christian; in his teens and against her wishes he joined the Methodists. Joseph attended one of the meetings of the farmworkers union leader Joseph Arch. Although only a boy, he decided to join the union when he could. Also at this time, he came into contact with the third great influence of is life - the friendly society movement which gave him a belief in self-help.
By his late teens, he had found work with the Ordnance Survey, carrying instruments and taking simple measurements with a firm of surveyors in the Tysoe area; it was while working with the survey that he met Bolton King, the educationalist and sociologist, who was at that time a young Oxford graduate. King had found his vocation in social reform. Through his association with King and his contacts with local Liberalism Joseph began writing on the problems of rural life. He also collaborated with King on a survey of local villages. The methods employed were later used by the ministry of agriculture for its survey farm labour conditions during the first world war. Writing for the local press remained a source of income for the rest of Joseph’s life. His areas of interest included allotments, small-holdings, and the reform of land ownership. Extracts from his articles from the Warwickshire Advertiser were later published as "Joseph Ashby's Victorian Warwickshre".
Joseph married his cousin Hannah Ashby in 1885.
In 1880’s Joseph made contact again with Earl William Compton; Compton was at the time residing at Castle Ashby in Northamptonshire, and Joseph working nearby. Joseph had “stood in the road, waylaying his carriage. He met with recognition and welcome; an interview was arranged”. He persuaded Compton (now a liberal MP) to let a farm to the Tysoe Allotments Association for division into allotments and small-holdings himself becoming one of the first tenants.
From 1886 until 1910 he was an active and important figure in Warwickshire Liberalism, and from 1883 to 1906 he acted as Liberal agent for the southern part of the Rugby constituency. He spent the summer of 1893 as a travelling lecturer in one of the English Land Restoration League's “red vans”, arguing for allotments, small-holdings, and the restoration of the land to the people through land nationalization.
By the 1890’s, Joseph’s various activities bought him a number of suggestions for gaining work outside Tysoe. Earl Compton wrote offering to find him a place on the Northampton estates . Later the Earl was to contact Joseph again, asking him to be a Liberal candidate for the parliamentary division of Stratford.
With a legacy from Hannah’s aunt, they were able to move, in 1895, into Church cottage, Tysoe. In 1900, they moved into the Orchards, a little farmstead in Lower Tysoe. In the 1900s he became a parish and district councillor and a justice of the peace. Early in 1914 Josephs's scattered hundred acres in Tysoe were exchanged for a 200-acre holding, Coldstone Farm, at Ascott under Wychwood in Oxfordshire, where he died on 4 March 1919.
[edit] References
- Alun Howkins, ‘Ashby, Joseph (1859-1919)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, [1]
- M. K. Ashby, "Joseph Ashby of Tysoe, 1859-1919: a study of English village life" (1961)
- Anne Langley, "Joseph Ashby's Victorian Warwickshire" (2007)
- Warks. CRO, Ashby papers CR2500, CR2783