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  1. Robert Dale Owen (1801–1877) left Scotland at the age of twenty-four to help run an experimental colony in New Harmony, Indiana, established by this father Robert Owen, the social reformer.

  2. Robert Dale Owen (1801–1877) was born in Scotland and emigrated to the United States in 1825 to help his social reformer father Robert Owen set up an experimental community in New Harmony, Indiana. He was elected to the US House of Representatives in 1842, and appointed US minister at Naples in 1853.

  3. 5 de abr. de 2019 · Robert Owen es uno de los principales exponentes del llamado socialismo utópico. Este término fue acuñado por Marx y Engels, para contraponerlo a sus teorías, que denominaron socialismo científico. Los padres del marxismo encasillaron a todos aquellos socialistas no marxistas en este grupo.

  4. 10 de may. de 2024 · Robert Owen (born May 14, 1771, Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales—died November 17, 1858, Newtown) was a Welsh manufacturer turned reformer, one of the most influential early 19th-century advocates of utopian socialism. His New Lanark mills in Lanarkshire, Scotland, with their social and industrial welfare programs, became a place of pilgrimage ...

  5. Born in Scotland, Owen became a social reformer associated with the American utopian movements, rights for women, and the emancipation of slaves "A list of the writings of Robert Dale Owen": pages 419-428. Bibliography: p. 429-440 American Historical Association John H. Dunning Prize for U.S. history, 1940

  6. Moral Physiology, Or A Brief and Plain Treatise on the Population Question. By Robert Dale Owen.... Author: Robert Dale Owen: Publisher: printed and publisher by James Watson, 18; Commercial place, City road, Finsbury, 1842: Original from: Harvard University: Digitized: Oct 19, 2005: Length: 48 pages : Export Citation: BiBTeX EndNote RefMan

  7. The Wrong of Slavery, the Right of Emancipation, and the Future of the African Race in the United States is a book written in 1864 by Robert Dale Owen. He was appointed by Secretary Edwin Stanton [1] to work on the American Freedmen's Inquiry Commission tasked with investigating the condition of freedmen of African descent, [2] together with Samuel Gridley Howe and James McKaye. [3]