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  1. 1 de out. de 2021 · Within a year Robert Owen was negotiating with David Dale to purchase New Lanark. He married Caroline Dale on 30 September 1799, and took over New Lanark on 1 January 1800 for £60,000. This wasn't quite the end of Dale's involvement in cotton: in 1801 he helped Glasgow manufacturer James Craig buy the similar Stanley Mills in Perthshire.

  2. Owen, David Dale, 1807-1860: Maps and illustrations referred to in vol. 2 & 3 of the report of the Geological Survey of Kentucky 1857 (A.G. Hodges, State Printer, 1855), also by Kentucky. State Geologist (page images at HathiTrust) Owen, David Dale, 1807-1860: Mineral lands of the United States. (Gov't print. off., 1845), also by United States.

  3. However, Iain Whyte recently noted that David Dale, who founded New Lanark in 1785, was also a founding member and chairman of the Glasgow Society for the Abolition of the African Slave Trade in 1791, which begins to move attention onto the complicated relationship between Atlantic slavery and improvement.20 Dale’s son-in-law, the Welshman Robert Owen, took over New Lanark from 1799–c ...

  4. ated less than $2,000 annually for David Dale Owen to conduct a geological survey of the state, which, as one of my neighbors is fond of pointing out, "apparently has never been finished, but why hasn't it?" As it turned out, David Dale Owen accomplished much more than perhaps even the modern state legislature has yet realized.

  5. Owen published many works on several topics, including "Outlines of System of Education at New Lanark," "Discussion with Origen Bachelor on the Personality of God and the Authenticity of the Bible," and his autobiography, "Threading my Way." Robert Dale Owen died on June 24, 1877. David Dale Owen was born June 24, 1807 in New Lanark, Scotland.

  6. Owen, D.D. 1844. Report of a Geological Exploration of Part of Iowa, Wisconsin, and Illinois, made under Instructions from the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States in the Autumn of the Year 1839. 191 pp., 25 plates. Washington: Government Printing Office. GoogleBooks Reference page .

  7. ated less than $2,000 annually for David Dale Owen to conduct a geological survey of the state, which, as one of my neighbors is fond of pointing out, "apparently has never been finished, but why hasn't it?" As it turned out, David Dale Owen accomplished much more than perhaps even the modern state legislature has yet realized.