William Cooke Taylor

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William Cooke Taylor
William Cooke Taylor

William Cooke Taylor, Writer, Journalist, Historian and Anti-Corn Law propagandist. Born at Youghal on the 16th April 1800 and died at 20 Herbert Street, Dublin on the 12th September 1849.[1]


He is best known for two works The Natural History of Society (1841) and Factories and the Factory System (1844). In the late 1830s he toured the northern English industrial centres and wrote considerably for the Anti-Corn Law League [2] and his observations of the factories of Manchester and Bolton provide a first hand account of the depression at that time. In 1843 he became the editor of Anti-Corn Law’s ‘The League’. [2]


He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin and gained a BA in 1825 and an LL.D in 1835.[3] In 1829 he moved to London and began to contribute regularly to journals such as the Athenaeum, Bentley’s Miscellany and The Art Journal. In London he worked as his a writer for hire or as his obituary puts it “a writer for his daily bread.” He published profusely throughout his career, writing on religion, history and a number of biographies, most notably that of Sir Robert Peel. He returned to Ireland for the last two years of his life where he worked as a Statistician for the Irish Government before he died of Cholera in 1859.[3]


He was the son of Richard Taylor, a Youghal manufacturer and he married Marianne Taylor, his first cousin. He had four children, three girls and a boy, Richard Whateley Cook Taylor, a factory inspector who also went on to write about the factory system in his book Introduction to a history of the factory system.[4]


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Contents

[edit] References

  1. ^ Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland Journal, 1861, p263.
  2. ^ a b CHALONER, W. H. in his introduction to the 1968 third edition of Cook Taylor’s Notes of a tour in the manufacturing districts of Lancashire
  3. ^ a b The Gentleman's Magazine, 1850, p94-6.
  4. ^ Introduction to a history of the factory system (1886)

[edit] Sources

McCord, N (1958). The Anti-Corn Law League, 1838- 1846 pp. 185-6

The Gentleman's Magazine, 1850, p94-6

Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland Journal, 1861, p263

[edit] External links

[edit] Bibliography

  • Historical Miscellany, Whittaker, Treacher and Co., London, 1829
  • History of France and Normandy, Whittaker, Treacher and Co., London, 1830
  • History of the Civil Wars of Ireland, Constable & Co., London, 1831
  • Readings in Biography, John W. Parker, London, 1833
  • History of Ireland, J & J Harper New York, 1833
  • Outlines of Sacred History, John W. Parker, London, 1833
  • The History of Mohammedanism and its sects, John W. Parker, London, 1834
  • Sanskrit Literature, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, London, 1834
  • On the nature and objects of statistical science, S.N., London, 1835
  • The History of the overthrow of the Roman Empire, and the foundation of the principal European states, Whittaker & Co., London, 1836
  • Chapters on Coronations, John W. Parker, London, 1838
  • Natural History of Society, D. Appleton & Co., New York, 1841
  • Anti-corn-law agitation, J. Gadsby, Manchester, 1842
  • Notes of a tour in the manufacturing districts of Lancashire, Duncan and Malcolm, London, 1842
  • Romantic biography of the times of Elizabeth, Richard Bentley, London, 1842
  • An Illustrated Itinerary of the County of Lancaster, London, 1842
  • A Popular History of British India, James Madden & Co., London, 1842
  • The hand book of silk, cotton and woollen manufactures, Richard Bentley, 1843
  • Revolutions and Remarkable Conspiracies of Europe, Richard Bentley, London, 1843
  • Factories and the Factory System, Jeremiah How, London, 1844
  • History of Christianity, John W. Parker, London, 1844
  • A Manual of Ancient & Modern History, D. Appleton & Co., New York, 1845
  • The Modern British Plutarch, Grant and Griffith, London, 1846
  • The National Portrait Gallery of illustrations and eminent personages, chiefly of the nineteenth century, Caxton Press, London, 1846
  • Notes of a visit to the model schools in Dublin, Hodges and Smith, Dublin, 1848
  • On the changes in the locality of textile manufactures, Hodges and Smith, Dublin, 1848
  • Memoirs of the House of Orleans, Richard Bentley, London, 1849
  • Life and times of Sir Robert Peel, Peter Jackson, London, 1851
  • The occult sciences, R. Griffin and Co., London & Glasgow, 1855
  • The Bible illustrated from Egyptian Monuments, Adamant Media Corporation, 2001
  • Reminiscences of Daniel O'Connell, Fisher, Son, & Co., Dublin, 1847
  • History of Poetry
  • Readings in Poetry