W. E. Adams

Deceased Person

1832 – 1906

68

Who was W. E. Adams?

William Edwin Adams was an English Radical and journalist.

Adams was born in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, the son of a tramping plasterer. He was influenced by the works of Thomas Paine and Giuseppe Mazzini, whom he regarded as "the greatest teacher since Christ". He also believed that community self-government and community representation as "the essence of all political liberalism that is worthy of the name".

Adams believed that the American Civil War "was the greatest question of the centuries. It was greater than the Great Rebellion, greater than the French Revolution, greater than the war of Independence...as great as any that has been fought out since history began".

From 1864 until retiring in 1900, Adams was editor of the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle, where he advanced internationalism, trade unionism, co-operatives and Lib-Labism. He deplored the rise of socialism in the 1880s and after a serious illness he abandoned politics for local concerns, such as bowling greens for workers, tree planting, free libraries and parks for the people. Due to worsening health he spent winters in Funchal, Madeira, Portugal, where he died and was buried. A marble bust of Adams was unveiled by Thomas Burt MP on the first anniversary of his death.

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Born
Feb 11, 1832
Died
May 13, 1906

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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