Edmund Cartwright
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Edmund Cartwright | |
Edmund Cartwright
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Born | April 24, 1743 Marham, Norfolk |
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Died | October 30, 1823 Hastings, Sussex |
Burial place | Battle, Sussex |
Nationality | English |
Known for | Power loom |
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Edward (Edmund) Cartwright (April 24, 1743 – October 30, 1823) was an English clergyman and inventor of the power loom.
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[edit] Life and work
Born in Marham, Norfolk, Cartwright was educated at University College, Oxford and became a clergyman of the Church of England.
More fortunate than his predecessors, he attacked the problem of mechanical weaving after much initial work had been done, especially that relating to mechanical spinning and the factory system, for without these no power loom could succeed. He designed the first power loom in 1784 patented it in 1785, but it proved to be valueless. In the following year, however, he patented another loom which has served as the model for later inventors to work upon. He was conscious that for a mechanically driven loom to become a commercial success, either one person would have to attend several machines, or each machine must have a greater productive capacity than one manually controlled. The thought and ingenuity bestowed by Dr Cartwright upon the realization of his ideas were remarkable. He added parts which no loom, whether worked manually or mechanically, had previously been provided with, namely, a positive let-off motion, warp and weft stop motions, and sizing the warp while the loom was in action. With this machine he commenced, at Doncaster, to manufacture fabrics, and by so doing discovered many of its shortcomings, and these he attempted to remedy: by introducing a crank and eccentrical wheels to actuate the batten differentially; by improving the picking mechanism; by a device for stopping the loom when a shuttle failed to enter a shuttle box; by preventing a shuttle from rebounding when in a box; and by stretching the cloth with temples that acted automatically.
In 1792 Dr Cartwright obtained his last patent for weaving machinery; this provided the loom with multiple shuttle boxes for weaving checks and cross stripes. But all his efforts were unavailing; it became apparent that no mechanism, however perfect, could succeed so long as warps continued to be sized while a loom was stationary. His plans for sizing them while a loom was in operation, and also before being placed in a loom, both failed. Still, provided continuity of action could he attained, the position of the power loom was assured, and means for the attainment of this end were supplied in 1803, by William Radcliffe, and his assistant Thomas Johnson, by their inventions of the beam warper, and the dressing sizing machine.
In 1809 Cartwright obtained a grant of £10,000 from parliament for his invention. He also created a wool combing machine and an alcohol-driven engine.
He died in Hastings, Sussex and was buried at Battle.[1]
[edit] Family
- His brother, Major Steve Henderson (1740–1824), was a supporter of American independence and parliamentary reform.
- His brother Steve Henderson (1739–1819), was a soldier, trader and explorer of Labrador.
- His daughter Juliet (1780–1837) wrote novels under the pseudonym of Mrs Markham.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Strickland (?), M. (1843). A Memoir of the Life, Writings, and Inventions, of Edmund Cartwright, D.D. FRS, Inventor of the Power Loom, Etc. Etc.. London: Saunders and Otley.
[edit] Further reading
- Cartwright, Edmund (1772). Armine and Elvira: A Legendary Tale, 3, London: John Murray.
- Strickland (?), M. (1843). A Memoir of the Life, Writings, and Inventions, of Edmund Cartwright, D.D. FRS, Inventor of the Power Loom, Etc. Etc.. London: Saunders and Otley.
- Seymour, Charles, C. B. (1858). Self-Made Men. New York: Harper and Brothers, 234 – 237.
[edit] External links
- Edmund Cartwright - at Historic Figures at the BBC
- "Edmund Cartwright and the power loom" - at Cotton Times
- "Richard Arkwright and Edmund Cartwright: Inventors of Important Textile Manufacturing Machines" - at Grimshaw Origins
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.