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The Industrial Revolution: Technological Innovation in the Textile Industry, 1672–1929
Bolton's textile industry throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries: manufacture, trade, and politics
About the year 1772 I began to endeavour to find out, if possible, a better way of making cotton yarn than was then in general use; being grieved at the bad yarn I had to weave. But to be short, it took me six yearsSamuel Crompton, Dec 1802,
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Explore the industrial revolution across North West England
This collection traces the development of the Industrial Revolution in Britain through two prominent families connected to Bolton’s textile industry: the Cromptons and the Heywoods.
The Crompton family were significant due to Samuel Crompton’s invention of the revolutionary spinning mule in 1779, an innovation which faciliatated massive productivity when producing textiles on a grand scale. The Heywoods became famous through Robert Heywood, who used his successful textile business to launch a political career during the rise of the Chartist movement.
Correspondence between key figures amongst the family and their respective businesses make up the bulk of the collection. The collection also includes property descriptions and valuations, newspaper cuttings, and travel journals. Significantly, these papers track the social, political, and economic impact of the Industrial Revolution throughout northern England and beyond.
Contents
The Industrial Revolution: Technological Innovation in the Textile Industry, 1672–1929...
Bolton's textile industry throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries: manufacture, trade, and politics
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Insights
- The Heywood papers contain information on Heywood's international travel and trade. They also include correspondence on the Bolton's politics, including the Chartist riots.
- The Crompton Papers are the largest part of this collection. The majority of these papers are letters from 1672 to 1862.
- The latter three pages of Crompton document listings cover Crompton as the inventor of the mule. They also include family wills, extracts of items on the cotton industry and his account books.
- Charles Dickens' journal All The Year Round features within papers on the doctrines of Emanuel Swedenborg. The volume from April in 1860 includes a biography of Samuel Crompton.
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