3542 x 4850 px | 30 x 41,1 cm | 11,8 x 16,2 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
août 2013
Lieu:
Newtown, Powys, Wales. UK
Informations supplémentaires:
Plaque on a side wall of the Argos shop in Newtown. Robert Owen was one of the most influential thinkers and social reformers of his time. The Robert Owen Museum in Newtown, houses a collection of objects, pictures and written material relating to the life of Robert Owen. The Museum tells Owen’s story and is in Newtown just a few feet from where Owen was born. Robert Owen was born in 1771. At 10, he was sent to London to be apprenticed as a draper and by his early twenties he was a successful manager in the mills of Manchester. The working conditions there appalled him. He believed character was formed by experience and that the dreadful environment of child workers would inevitably lead to damaged and dehumanised adults. So when, in his late twenties, Owen became a partner and manager of a large cotton mill at New Lanark on the River Clyde, he decided to create a model environment. He improved the factory and village, built a school and provided a shop where quality goods could be bought at a fair price. The school curriculum included music, dancing and nature study. Visitors came from all over the world. Owen campaigned and lectured throughout his life. In 1812-13 he wrote “A New View of Society” which explained his vision. He tried to repeat the success of New Lanark when in 1824 he created a model community in New Harmony, Indiana. The ideal was a village based on co-operation and profit sharing. New Harmony and similar experiments by his followers did not succeed as he had hoped. But his ideas continued to have influence and one group of followers in Rochdale set up the famous Co-operative shop in 1844 and pioneered the world wide co-operative movement. Owen returned to Newtown at the end of his life and died there in 1858. Factory reform and universal education were achieved in the 19th century, and Owen’s vision for fairness and social progress remains a source of inspiration today. Thanks to the Robert Owen Museum in Newport, Powys. Wales. Tel: 01686 622510