In 1878–9 Hughes began writing
The Manual for Co-operators (1881), with
Vansittart Neale, for the Co-operative Congress. As a side-product he developed an interest in the
model village. In 1880, he acquired the ownership of
Franklin W. Smith's
Plateau City and founded a settlement in America—
Rugby, Tennessee—which was designed as an experiment in
utopian living for the younger sons of the English gentry. It followed closely on the failed colony Buckthorn (existing about 1872 to 1879), established by another Englishman, Charles Lempriere, in western Virginia; this settlement had supposedly been suggested by Hughes. Rugby was also unsuccessful on its own terms, but it still exists and is listed on the US
National Register of Historic Places. Hughes was also a prominent figure in the anti-opium movement, and a member of the
Society for the Suppression of the Opium Trade. At the end of the 1880s Hughes clashed with
John Thomas Whitehead Mitchell of the
Co-operative Wholesale Society, over the
vertical integration Mitchell favoured for the Society. Hughes died in 1896 aged 73, at
Brighton, of heart failure, and was buried there. ==Works==