James Field Stanfield (1749-1824)
The Dublin-born actor, abolitionist and freemason James Field Stanfield spent most of his career performing in theatres in the north of England.
Biography
The Carlisle antiquarian and publisher Francis Jollie established Carlisle’s first newspaper, the Carlisle Journal in 1798 in which he published Robert Anderson’s verse. Jollie printed William Hutchinson’s second edition of The Spirit of Masonry in 1795, plus Hutchinson’s History of Cumberland (1793), History and Antiquities of the City of Carlisle (1796) and the third volume of History and Antiquities of the County Palantine, of Durham in 1794 after Hutchinson had entered into a legal action with the husband of Sarah Hodgson, Samuel Hodgson who had printed the first two volumes. Jollie also printed work by William Paley, the Archdeacon of Carlisle, which was aimed at Sunday School students and British labourers as well as Paley’s Recollections of a speech, upon the slave trade; delivered in Carlisle, on Thursday the 9th of February, 1792. Jollie’s own Sketch of Cumberland Manners and Customs appeared in 1811 as did his two volume Cumberland Guide and Directory which was the first directory of the county.