Henry Dunckley

Author

1823 – 1896

1

Who was Henry Dunckley?

Henry Dunckley was an English Baptist minister, journalist and newspaper editor.

Born in Warwick in 1823, he was educated at the Baptist college at Accrington, Lancashire, and at the University of Glasgow. He became in 1848 minister of the Baptist church at Salford, Lancashire where he closely investigated the educational needs of the working-classes, embodying the results of his inquiries in an essay, The Glory and the Shame of Britain, which gained a prize offered by the Religious Tract Society. In 1852 he won the Anti-Corn-law Leagues prize with an essay on the results of the free-trade policy, published in 1854 under the title The Charter of the Nations.

In 1855 he abandoned the ministry to edit the Manchester Examiner and Times, a prominent Liberal newspaper, in charge of which he remained till 1889. For twenty years he wrote, over the signature Verax, weekly letters to the Manchester papers; those on The Crown and the Cabinet and The Crown and the Constitution evoked so much enthusiasm that a public subscription was set on foot to present the writer with a handsome testimonial for his public services.

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Born
Dec 24, 1823
Education
  • University of Glasgow
Died
Jun 29, 1896
Manchester

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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"Henry Dunckley." Biographies.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 14 May 2024. <https://www.biographies.net/people/en/henry_dunckley>.

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