John Deakin Heaton and the ‘elusive civic pride of the Victorian middle class’

Civic pride is rarely studied at the individual level. The journals of Dr John Deakin Heaton provide a unique insight into the motivations of a man linked to many institutions and civic sites of Leeds, celebrated by historians as a progenitor of its famous town hall and the city's first univers...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urban history 2018-11, Vol.45 (4), p.595-615
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description Civic pride is rarely studied at the individual level. The journals of Dr John Deakin Heaton provide a unique insight into the motivations of a man linked to many institutions and civic sites of Leeds, celebrated by historians as a progenitor of its famous town hall and the city's first university. This article uses those journals to investigate the matrix of family honour, Anglicanism and professional identity, tempered by self-interest, underpinning Heaton's desire to improve his native town. Its conclusions further justify the recent historiographical emphasis on associational culture and ritual in the study of urban governance.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Jstor Complete Legacy; Cambridge Journals Online
subjects Anglicanism
Antebellum period
Core curriculum
Councils
Governance
Heaton, John
Historians
Local government
Middle class
Politics
Professional identity
Rituals
Self interest
Victorian period
title John Deakin Heaton and the ‘elusive civic pride of the Victorian middle class’
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