Manchester Geographical Society


The Manchester Geographical Society is a learned society and a registered charity based in Manchester, England.

History

When it was founded, by a group of Manchester businessmen, it was addressed by Sir Henry Morton Stanley, the African explorer. The society's original interest was in commercial and political geography, and it later contributed to creation of the first Lecturership in Geography at Owen’s College, Manchester and the first Chair in Geography at the University of Manchester. The Society’s Museum was later dispersed.
Notable individuals involved in the Society’s early years have included Spencer, 8th Duke of Devonshire, George V and Louis Charles Casaertelli. Among the society's founders was Eli Sowerbutts who was its Secretary, whose sons also became Secretary, Harry Sowerbutts and Thomas William Sowerbutts. The Society became a registered charity in 1963, and was later incorporated as a Charitable Trust in 2010.

Lunchtime Lecture Series

Throughout its history the Society has organised an annual lecture series providing free public talks on a range of topics from September to June.

Research Fund

The Society’s Research Fund provides North-West England university lecturers with funds for small projects.

Bursaries and Prizes

Each year, the Society provides Bursaries to enable postgraduate Geography Students to attend conferences. It also awards Prizes for the best Geography Undergraduate Finals Performance Students at the University of Manchester.

Journal

The Society’s published journal was The Journal of the Manchester Geographical Society, succeeded by The Manchester Geographer and The North West Geographer. In 2001, it was renamed North West Geography and became a free online journal. The Society has also published an Exploring Greater Manchester series of excursion guides.

Library (and Atlas and Map) and Archive Collections

The Society’s Library has been on permanent loan to the University of Manchester Library since 1970: it contains books on Britain, nineteenth and twentieth century exploration, and travel and geography in Europe, Oceania, Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Its Map Collection from the eighteenth to twentieth centuries covers Africa, various continents as well as admiralty charts and other ephemera. The Society’s Atlas Collection dates from 1701. The Society’s Archives have been deposited at Manchester Archives, Manchester Central Library.

Footnotes