Title
Copies of Bradley Family Photographs
Reference
YA1996.2634
Production date
1880 - 1989
Creator
- Science and Industry MuseumBiographyBiography
The Science and Industry Museum traces its existence back to 1963, when a joint committee was formed to investigate the establishment of a museum of science and industry in Manchester. The committee consisted of representatives from the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST), the University of Manchester, and Manchester City Council.
In 1965, the Department of the History of Science and Technology at UMIST began to collect historic artefacts to form the basis for the new museum. The Museum originally opened in October 1969 in premises on Grosvenor Street, Manchester.
In 1972, the Museum changed its name to the North Western Museum of Science and Industry, to reflect the regional scope of its collections. The Museum had rapidly outgrown its original premises, but the creation of Greater Manchester County Council (GMC) in 1974 and the closure of Liverpool Road Station by British Rail in 1975 provided the solution to its accommodation problem. GMC became firstly a co-funder of the Museum and then, following the decision to acquire the historic station to house the Museum, the sole funder. This brought a change of emphasis in collecting. Reborn as the Greater Manchester Museum of Science and Industry in 1983, the Museum narrowed its primary geographical focus to Greater Manchester. The site itself, the world’s oldest surviving passenger railway station, is treated as part of the Museum’s collections.
In 1985, the Museum was asked to take over the adjacent Air and Space Museum, which had been set up and run by Manchester City Council. As a result of the abolition of Greater Manchester Council in 1986, the Museum secured ongoing revenue funding from the then Office of Arts and Libraries (later the Department of Culture, Media and Sport and currently the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport). The Museum name changed to the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester, or MSIM, around this time.
In 2007, the Museum was rebranded as MOSI.
The Museum joined the Science Museum Group in 2012. It was rebranded to become the Museum of Science and Industry in 2015, and subsequently the Science and Industry Museum in 2018.
- Elliott & FryBiographyBiography
1863-1963, photography studio and photographic film manufacturer, London
Founded by Joseph John Elliott and Clarence Edmund Fry in 1863. Photographers and photographic film manufacturers. Based at 55-56 Baker Street, London until 1919. But from the 1880s they had three photographic studios and a printing works in Barnet. In WWII, one of their studios was bombed. The company was taken over by Alexander Bassano in 1963.
- Wright and Co.BiographyBiography
Wright & Co was a photography business based in Blackburn at 40 Preston New Road and Oldham, at 6 Union Street. The business is known to have been active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
- Clarke Acton, W.BiographyBiography
W. Clarke Acton was a photographer known to have been active in the 1920s. Clarke Acton was based in Ashton-Under-Lyne at 23 Old Street.
Scope and Content
Collection of wedding photographs of Harold Bradley and Eliza Stott (1900), the golden wedding of Thomas and Sarah Ann Bradley (1925) and portraits of Thomas Bradley and Daniel Adamson. The collection also includes annotated photocopies of each photograph, identifying individuals and supplying contextual information.
Extent
0.04 linear metres
Physical description
Good
Language
English
Archival history
Archive donated by P. Kenyon, a descendent of Thomas Bradley. The originals of the photographs are also held by the museum.
Level of description
TOP
Repository name
Science and Industry Museum
Associated people and organisations
- Adamson, DanielBiographyBiography
Born in Shildon, County Durham in 1820, Daniel Adamson was educated at Edward Walton Quaker school. He left school aged 13 to take up an apprenticeship with Timothy Hackworth, engineer to the Stockton and Darlington Railway. After his apprenticeship, he continued to work under Hackworth as a draughtsman and engineer. By 1850, Adamson was the general manager of the Stockton and Darlington engine works. He left the Stockton works in 1850 to become the manager of the Heaton foundry, Stockport.
A year later, Adamson established his own ironworks at Newton Moor, Dukinfield. He expanded the works by building a foundry in 1852, known as the Newton Moor Iron Works. The company manufactured engines and boilers, initially to designs by Hackworth. Adamson's improvements to the boiler designs led to the development of the Manchester Boiler. Expansion of the company through the international success of the Manchester Boiler enabled Adamson to build a new factory in Dukinfield in 1872, under the company name Daniel Adamson & Co. The success of the company also allowed Adamson to experiment with foundry processes and boiler manufacturing, improving boiler design and manufacturing processes. Between 1852 and 1888, Adamson took out nineteen patents relating to engineering and metallurgy.
Adamson's other business interests included the Newton Moor Spinning Company, which he established in 1862, and the Yorkshire Steel and Iron Works set up by Adamson at Penistone, West Riding of Yorkshire, in 1863. The Penistone works were the first in the country to carry out the large-scale manufacture of steel the Bessemer process. Adamson also contributed to the development of the Lincolnshire iron field through the North Lincolnshire Iron Company, which he established at Frodingham in 1864–5. He also held shares in iron works in Cumbria and South Wales.
Adamson is also known for championing the development of the Manchester Ship Canal. In 1882, he arranged a meeting of all interested parties at his home in Didsbury, Manchester, at which the engineering and commercial aspects of creating a shipping waterway between Manchester and Liverpool were discussed. Adamson was elected chairman of the provisional committee to promote the Manchester Ship Canal. The scheme faced opposition from railway companies and the Liverpool port authority, but Adamson successfully pushed it through Parliament. The resulting Act of Parliament in 1885 ensured the canal would be built and allowed the establishment of the Manchester Ship Canal Company. Adamson was appointed first chairman of the board of directors. Lack of funding for the completion of the project led to a reconstitution of the board in 1887, with Adamson resigning as chairman in favour of Lord Egerton of Tatton.
Adamson was active in industry and public life. He was vice-president of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers and president of the Iron and Steel Institute. He was also a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers, the Geological Society, and the British Iron Trades Association. In the public realm, Adamson was a director of the Manchester chamber of commerce, Justice of the Peace for Cheshire and Manchester, and chairman of Dukinfield local board.
Adamson died at home in Didsbury in 1890 and is buried in the Southern Cemetery, Manchester.
Subject
Conditions governing access
Open access.
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions.