Wheeler became a supporter of Robert Owen and active in the Chartist movement. With his brother, he helped run the Friend-in-Need Life Assurance Society, becoming secretary after his brother's death, in 1862.[2]
The Friend-in-Need collapsed in 1867, and Wheeler later moved to Glasgow, where he died early in 1878.[3]
References
^ abcBreuilly, John; Niedhart, Gottfried; Taylor, Antony (1995). The Era of the Reform League: English Labour and Radical Politics 1857–1872. Mannheim: J & J Verlag. p. 350.
^Stevens, William (1862). A memoir of T. M. Wheeler. London: John Bedford Leno.
^"The late Mr G. W. Wheeler". Insurance Guardian. 28 January 1878.