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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language | eng |
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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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