A fair copy, compiled in the mid-19th century, of the accounts and journal of George Heywood of Manchester, grocer. Heywood records that he was inspired to compile a record of his life by a sermon on self-examination by a local Unitarian preacher, and he spent five shillings on a specially-made book in 1815 (Barker and Hughes, 169). This copy can be dated approximately from the paper leaves watermarked '1844'.
The contents of the volume comprise:
- folio 1: personal ledger of George Heywood, containing debit and credit accounts with several individuals and companies, 1806-1816;
- folio 6v: a detailed journal or narrative of the life of George Heywood; the bulk of the journal was written in 1815, and recounts his life from 1788 onwards; it continues until 1840, but after 1816 (ending folio 105r) entries are irregular, recording only the major events in Heywood's life such as the births of children;
- folio 109r: notes on the births of Heywood's children;
- folio 110r: memoranda on births, marriages and deaths in the family;
- folio 111v: pedigree of the Heywood family of Huddersfield and Manchester.
The journal is an important source for the social and economic life of shopkeepers in the early nineteenth century, the economic and familial underpinnings of small businesses, the availability of financial capital and mechanisms for raising money, employer-employee relations, the role of women in family businesses, and relations between the sexes.