There are
blue plaques at
The Towers (today the
Shirley Institute), Wilmslow Road in Didsbury, and in Adamson Street, Dukinfield. Also in Dukinfield, St Luke's Church has a stained glass window in his memory. The Adamson Military Band was also named after him. The Daniel Adamson Coach House has been preserved in Shildon. The former Manchester Ship Canal Company steam-powered tug-tender
Daniel Adamson (built in 1903 as
Ralph Brocklebank but renamed in 1936) has been restored by the Daniel Adamson Preservation Society and entered passenger-carrying service under steam on 22 April 2017. Adamson is buried at
Southern Cemetery, Manchester, in grave space "A-Church of England-40". He was buried three days after his death at his home in
Didsbury, on 16 January 1890. He was a founder member of the
Iron and Steel Institute and served as its president in 1887. He was awarded the institute's
Bessemer Gold Medal in 1888 for his work on the properties of iron and steel and the use of steel for steam boilers and other purposes. He was also a Member of the
Institution of Civil Engineers, the Cleveland Institution of Engineers, the British Iron Trades Association, the Railway and Canal Traders' Association, the
Geological Society of London, the
Society of Arts, the Manchester Geographical Society, the
Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society, the Manchester Geological Society and others. ==References==