James Brown, founder of the Isle of Man Times
Date(s): late 19th century
Scope & Content: James Brown (1815-1881) was born in Liverpool on 2 August 1815. The son of a freed slave, in 1846 he came to the Isle of Man from Liverpool where he had worked as a printing compositor.
He founded the Isle of Man Times in 1861 and from its second issue waged a campaign against the Island's Government to introduce reforms such as a popularly elected House of Keys. This campaign ultimately resulted in his imprisonment in Castle Rushen on 16 March 1864 for six months 'to purge his contempt', following his refusal to the House for his activities. Brown was released on 7 May 1864 and awarded £500 damages against the Keys for wrongful imprisonment.
His campaign in the Isle of Man is seen as having been highly instrumental in bringing about Government reform.
'Between March 1864 and July 1865 James Brown had made his most important contribution to democratic reform in the Island. By openly defying the House of Keys, defeating them in the Court of Queen’s Bench, winning his freedom after serving only seven-and-a-half weeks of a six months’ sentence, and then winning substantial damages for false imprisonment, he had fatally weakened the status and authority of the self-elected House.' (Fyson, Robert, Dr, 'The struggle for Manx democracy, 2016.)
Language: eng
Extent: overall: 42 cm x 30 cm
Item name: photograph
Collection: Photographic Archive
Level: ITEM
ID number: PG/0586
Comments
Archive catalogue
Linked Records
People:
Museum:
- James Brown, reformer, journalist and founder of the Isle of Man Times (1815-1881)
- Diary of newspaper editor James Brown whilst imprisoned in Castle Rushen gaol, Castletown as a 'political prisoner' with additional scrapbook-style inserts about Brown and other family members (diary; scrapbook)
- The struggle for Manx democracy (book)
- Typescript transcription of diary of James Brown when incarcerated in Castle Rushen, Castletown in 1864
- James Brown, reformer, journalist and founder of the Isle of Man Times (1815-1881) (bust & pedestal)
- James Brown (founder of the Isle of Man Times) imprisoned in Castle Rushen Gaol (photograph)
- Studio portrait of James Brown (albumen photographic print)
Library:
Archives:
- Studio portrait of James Brown
- James Brown (founder of the Isle of Man Times) imprisoned in Castle Rushen Gaol
- Diary of newspaper editor James Brown whilst imprisoned in Castle Rushen gaol, Castletown as a 'political prisoner' with additional scrapbook-style inserts about Brown and other family members
- Typescript transcription of diary of James Brown when incarcerated in Castle Rushen, Castletown in 1864
Outstanding man, brave and responsible in part, if not in main, for the reform to a elected Government - Paul Dunne Report this