Edward Brotherton was an English Swedenborgian and a campaigner for educational reform.
Background
Brotherton was born at Manchester in 1814, and in early life was engaged in the silk trade, but, foreseeing that the commercial treaty with France was likely to bring to an end the prosperity of his business, he retired with a competence.
Career
After a year of continental travel he devoted himself to the work of popular education. The experiment upon the voluntary system tended to prove the necessity of compulsion. This demonstration, which H.A. Bruce, afterwards Lord Aberdare, called "the thunderclap from Manchester", paved the way for the Education Acting of 1870.
Brotherton"s zeal in the cause was unbounded.
He had patience, a winning grace of manner, and a candour only too rare in controversy. In the course of his visitations among the poor he caught a fever, of which he died, after a few days" illness, at Cornbrook, Manchester, 23 March 1866, and was buried at the Wesleyan cemetery in Cheetham Hill.
There is a portrait of him in Manchester Town Hall.