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Monday, January 14, 2013

The Remnants of Industry

de bene esse: literally, of well-being, morally acceptable but subject to future validation or exception

150 years ago these derelict woollen mills would have been noisy, stifling and full of toiling workers on 60-hour weeks.

Gone are the days when huge mills towered above the West Yorkshire skyline making the county the wool capital of the world.

Almost a century after the area’s wool makers pulled their final threads, the eerie shells of forgotten mills are brought back to life.
Days gone by: The Hey and Co Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, which once would have been would have been noisy, stifling and full of toiling workers on 60-hour weeks
Days gone by: The Hey and Co Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, which once would have been would have been noisy, stifling and full of toiling workers on 60-hour weeks
Descending: Dalton Mills in Keighley, part of an industry that once towered above the skyline of West Yorkshire, helping to make the county the wool capital of the world
Descending: Dalton Mills in Keighley, part of an industry that once towered above the skyline of West Yorkshire, helping to make the county the wool capital of the world

A 60-HOUR WEEK AND 34 WORKERS TO A WASHROOM: LIFE IN THE MILLS

While West Yorkshire's woollen mills were booming in Victorian times, life was stark for workers. It was typical in 1849 to work a 12-hour day and 60-hour week, with an hour and half for meals - which remained the case until 1870.

One washroom served 34 workers in a single mill and the children employed there were often susceptible to illness.

The life expectancy for tradesmen was 25 years - compared to 60 for the upper classes.

Wool was a dominant industry in northern England until retailers began to look abroad for lower production costs in the 20th century now explored in pictures highlighting the architecture of now-empty spaces that once  housed a hive of activity.
 
Wool making became popular across Yorkshire due to the terrain of the Pennines which were unsuitable for growing crops and too coarse for cattle to graze. Sheep thrived and the woollen mills were first powered by water, while great wooden hammers bear the cloth until the fibres interlocked. Due to the steep streams around Halifax, they used water methods there much longer than other neighbouring towns - who quickly adopted steam.

Abandoned: Dalton Mills in Keighley, which is one of many forgotten mills in West Yorkshire that has been brought back to life by a Scottish photographer
Abandoned: Dalton Mills in Keighley, which is one of many forgotten mills in West Yorkshire that has been brought back to life by a Scottish photographer
No longer used: The Hey and Co Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, which was photographed by Nicola Miller, who was born in Scotland but studied in Bradford
No longer used: The Hey and Co Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, which was photographed by Nicola Miller, who was born in Scotland but studied in Bradford
Eerie: Dalton Mills in Keighley. The woollen mills were first powered by water, while great wooden hammers bear the cloth until the fibres interlocked
Eerie: Dalton Mills in Keighley. The woollen mills were first powered by water, while great wooden hammers bear the cloth until the fibres interlocked

These included Bradford and Keighley - soon brought to the forefront of the wool industry, and where many woollen mills began operating.

Workers in the local mills were predominantly young and female, with a dozen women, boys and girls to every man.

Many of the children employed were 'half-timers' who worked at the mill for half a day and spent the other half at school.

Onlookers - men paid to work with women - earned up to 22 shillings a week, while women working in the weaving shed received up to 10 shillings.

Red tape: Stephensons & Bros Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, where more modern signs such as 'wear ear protectors' can be seen still attached inside the building
Red tape: Stephensons & Bros Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, where more modern signs such as 'wear ear protectors' can be seen still attached inside the building
To scale: Dalton Mills in Keighley, which is one of the areas soon brought to the forefront of the wool industry, and where many woollen mills began operating
To scale: Dalton Mills in Keighley, which is one of the areas soon brought to the forefront of the wool industry, and where many woollen mills began operating

In the carding - the drawing and spinning departments - the weekly wages for women and girls were merely around five shillings.

In 1849, when the wool industry was in its prime, workers had a 12-hour work day with an hour and a half for meals. This remained in force until 1870.

In the mills temperatures were often stifling and 34 workers were forced to share one washroom, leaving children working there susceptible to epidemics.

The impact upon life-span was dramatic. In 1840 in Halifax and Skircoat, the average age of death for the upper-class was 60.

Victorian prime: Dalton Mills in Keighley. Workers in the mills were predominantly young and female, with a dozen women, boys and girls for every man
Victorian prime: Dalton Mills in Keighley. Workers in the mills were predominantly young and female, with a dozen women, boys and girls for every man
Left out: Dalton Mills in Keighley. Many of the children employed in mills were 'half-timers' who worked at the mill for half a day and spent the other half at school
Left out: Dalton Mills in Keighley. Many of the children employed in mills were 'half-timers' who worked at the mill for half a day and spent the other half at school

Drawn out: Denholme Mill, another of West Yorkshire's abandoned wool manufacturing spots, where a chest of drawers has been left open and papers are on the floor
Drawn out: Denholme Mill, another of West Yorkshire's abandoned wool manufacturing spots, where a chest of drawers has been left open and papers are on the floor

For tradesmen and artisans it was 25 years. This number was raised by an unusual number of deaths at advanced ages among weavers.

Hundreds of traders flocked to auctions at the Bradford Wool Exchange weekly as merchants purchased and exchanged their goods. It was the only place in Britain where wool was sold - until retailers looked abroad to mass-produce fabrics at a low cost. Until then wool had been dominant in northern England as far back as the 8th century when a Norman emperor requested woollen cloaks.
Old designs: Bradfax Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, where decaying signs can be seen for different departments such as floor coverings, cutlery and curtains
Old designs: Bradfax Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, where decaying signs can be seen for different departments such as floor coverings, cutlery and curtains

Dalton Mills, Keighley, West Yorkshire
(Crabtree and Co Mill, Bradford West Yorkshire
Antiques: A scene from Dalton Mills in Keighley is seen; while Crabtree and Co Mill in Bradford is pictured - both displaying items that are now antiques
Open door: Stephensons & Bros Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, is a shadow of what it once was - full of workers who toiled in a noisy and stifling environment
Open door: Stephensons & Bros Mill in Bradford, West Yorkshire, is a shadow of what it once was - full of workers who toiled in a noisy and stifling environment
 
Wheel of fortune: Midland Mill in Bradford. In 1849, when the wool industry was in its prime, workers had a 12-hour working day with an hour and a half for meals
Wheel of fortune: Midland Mill in Bradford. In 1849, when the wool industry was in its prime, workers had a 12-hour working day with an hour and a half for meals
Faded glory: Stephensons & Bros, Mill in Bradford. Traders would flock to the Wool Exchange every week as merchants purchased and exchanged their goods
Faded glory: Stephensons & Bros, Mill in Bradford. Traders would flock to the Wool Exchange every week as merchants purchased and exchanged their goods

Falling apart: The names of two people can be seen scrawled on the left-hand wall - apparently 'Fran' and 'Chris' - of this West Yorkshire mill which was once thriving
Falling apart: The names of two people can be seen scrawled on the left-hand wall - apparently 'Fran' and 'Chris' - of this West Yorkshire mill which was once thriving
Mill workers operating the giant wool fluffing machine at the New Mill Elgin - 1952
The annual meeting of Porritts and Spencer Limited the Lancashire woollen and cotton goods manufacturers
Black and white: It might be decades after the Victorians, but mill workers can be seen operating the giant wool fluffing machine at the New Mill Elgin in Scotland in 1952 (left), while automatic weighing machines for feeding the wool into the first parts of the carding engines are seen (right) at Porritts & Spencer in Lancashire in 1935
Laxtons Specialist Yarns in Guiseley, West Yorkshire, now remains by far the biggest and most dedicated wool production company in the UK. Established in 1907, George H Laxton and Mr Gordon Holmes formed the spinning company Holmes Laxton & Co. They survived two World Wars, invested in new machinery and established Prospect Mills in Keighley. The company then changed its name to Laxton Crawford Ltd in 1978 and became one of the biggest fancy yarn spinning mills in Europe. Its new wool mill in Guiseley began spinning specialist yarns at home as late as January 2010, in a bid to bring wool production back to its roots.

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