James Dawson, Jun. Farmer’s son, originally from Hartshead, Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire. Moved to Manchester to begin a career in journalism, returning back to Hartshead by March 1867, according to the Chambers’s Journal ledger (NLS Dep 341/310). By 1 July 1871, the ledger address again lists him in Manchester (122 Water St) (NLS Dep 341/310). Member of Manchester Literary Club. Author of Fact and Fancies From the Farm: Lyrical Poems (John Camden Hotten, 1868); in the preface he describes himself as a farm labourer and asks his readers not to expect “the grace and finish of the classical scholar” (p. v). Dawson sent a copy of his book to Dickens, who praises it to Dawson as “a remarkable production” (The Letters of Charles Dickens, ed. Graham Storey, vol. 12, Clarendon Press, 2002, p. 223). Biographical information: Reilly, Mid-Victorian Poetry, pp. 127-8; Goodridge. (AC)