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  1. Within a year Robert Owen was negotiating with David Dale to purchase New Lanark. He married Caroline Dale on 30 September 1799, and took over New Lanark on 1 January 1800 for £60,000. This wasn't quite the end of Dale's involvement in cotton: in 1801 he helped Glasgow manufacturer James Craig buy the similar Stanley Mills in Perthshire.

  2. Owen House. 1859. Church St. The David Dale Owen Laboratory was built in 1859 for prominent geologist David Dale Owen (1807–1860), son of social reformer Robert Owen, a pioneering figure of utopian socialism, and Caroline Dale. Owen participated in his father’s secular utopian community at New Harmony, meeting many leading social reformers ...

  3. 1. Jan. 2008 · David Dale Owen and the geological enterprise of New Harmony, Indiana, with a companion roadside geology of Vanderburgh and Posey Counties January 2008 DOI: 10.1130/2008.fld012(07)

  4. Industrialist and philanthropist. David Dale owned the first cotton mill in Scotland (1778) and founded the New Lanark Mills. His son-in-law, Robert Owen, later took over them over and made them famous through his social programmes. David Dale was himself a pioneer in employees' welfare and imported food for the poor, at his own expense, in ...

  5. David Dale (1739-1806) ... Owen construit en 1816 des écoles pour les enfants de fileurs et lance en 1817 le mot d’ordre : « 8 heures de travail, 8 heures de loisir, 8 heures de sommeil », qui sera repris un demi-siècle plus tard p ...

  6. Added: Aug 26, 2000. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 11889. Source citation. Scientist. He was a leading nineteenth-century American geologist. He resided in New Harmony, Indiana, a town purchased by his father, social reformer Robert Owen, in 1825 from the Rappites. From there he headquartered federal geological surveys and the first official state ...

  7. David Dale Owen and Joseph Granville Norwood: Pioneer Geologists in Indiana and Illinois Clark Kimberling* In 1993 America’s highest-grossing concert act popularized a song entitled “Dire Wolf,”’ and a leading children’s television series was using dire wolves as bad guys.2 Elsewhere, players of Dungeons