List of mills in Wigan
This is a list of cotton spinning mills, weaving sheds, bleachers and dyers and other textile mills in Ashton-in-Makerfield, Astley, Atherton, Bedford, Leigh, Golborne, Haigh Hindley Ince-in-Makerfield, Orrell, Pennington, Leigh, Standish, Tyldesley, Westleigh, Leigh and Wigan which existed historically in Lancashire that, after its creation by the Local Government Act 1972, are part of the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan in Greater Manchester, England. The textile industry in the Wigan and Leigh areas grew out of a domestic putting-out system particularly fustians. Cotton, imported through the Port of Liverpool became more important in the late 18th century and more so after the advent of the Bridgewater Canal and Leeds and Liverpool Canal and after that the first railways, the Bolton and Leigh and Liverpool and Manchester Railway.[1] Wigan (fabric) was a stout cloth made from coarse cotton.
The Wigan borough has no fast-flowing streams to provide water power and consequently there were few factories until steam power became available. In the 19th century textile mills, situated on the Lancashire Coalfield, were powered by cheap easily accessible coal. In 1818 Wigan had eight mills in the Wallgate area and it developed as a cotton town in Victorian times and from 1889 until the First World War the largest ring spinning company in Britain was Farington, Eckersley & Co of Western and Swan Meadow Mills.[2]
After 1827 a silk industry grew in Leigh and silk fabrics were woven on domestic hand looms and in weaving sheds using silk yarn supplied from Macclesfield or Leek by agents from Manchester. In the mid-19th century silk weaving employed a significant number of people. The domestic weavers travelled from the surrounding townships to and from the agents’ warehouses in Leigh. At its peak in 1830 about 10,000 people, mostly domestic, were employed in silk weaving in the Leigh Parish, after which the numbers declined to 8,000 in 1841 and 2,301 in 1871. By 1836 the town had 20 silk firms, 15 in 1848, five by 1876 and two in 1897. Powered weaving was introduced from the 1850s reducing the number of domestic weavers required. Some manufacturers employed weavers in their homes and in weaving sheds. Bickham and Pownall owners of Stanley Mill employed 1,000 workers of which 500–600 worked in the mill and the rest in their homes. There were nine silk weaving sheds in 1870 but most were converted as cotton took over.[3] In 1891 Samuel Brown at Brook Mill, George Griffin on Brewery Lane and Charles Hilton and Son in Charles Street, all in Bedford were manufacturing silk fabrics.[4]
In 1911 in Leigh, 6,146 people were employed in the cotton industry and from 1913, measured by the number of spindles, it was the fifth-largest spinning centre in Greater Manchester. Cotton weaving was concentrated at Kirkhall Lane Mills built in 1836 and at Jones Brothers Bedford New Mills started in 1834 which developed into an integrated mill for spinning and weaving. In the early-20th century three large weaving sheds were constructed at Foundry Street, Elizabeth Street and Etherstone Street. For cotton spinning, multi-storey mills with massive floor areas were developed. In Westleigh, the Victoria Mills (Hayes Mills) off Kirkhall Lane were built from 1856 by James and John Hayes who had three mills by 1887. By 1902 Tunnicliffe and Hampson had built the three Firs Mills. Two clusters of mills were built in Bedford, along the Bedford Brook and in the 20th century, near the Bridgewater Canal.[5][6] The design of the surviving late-19th and early 20th-century factories along the Bridgewater Canal in Bedford is an example of the peak of the Lancashire mill-building tradition. Combined Egyptian Mills, a joint-stock company formed in 1929 with headquarters at Howe Bridge Mills in Atherton, was the second largest cotton-spinning company in the world with 34 mills and 3.2 million spindles.[2]
Ashton in Makefield
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Makerfield Mill | Ashton in Makerfield, SJ 580,987 53°28′59″N 2°38′02″W / 53.483°N 2.634°W | ||||
Astley
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Arrowsmiths Mill | Astley Green SJ 701,998 53°29′38″N 2°27′04″W / 53.494°N 2.451°W | 1833 | 1951 | 118 | |
Notes: James and Robert Arrowsmith built a mill at Astley Green by the Bridgewater Canal on land they leased in 1833. It was four storeys high with a pitched roof and a square tapered chimney. Between 1872 and 1951 it traded as T & C H Arrowsmith Ltd.[7] In 1892 the mill had 10,000 spindles and 500 looms weaving fustians, velvets, angolas and twills.[8] In 1919 a new engine house and weaving sheds were built around the old structure. Mining subsidence from Astley Green Colliery damaged the foundations of the old mill and in 1951, it closed.[9] | |||||
Atherton
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Atherton Mill | Atherton SD 686,022 53°30′58″N 2°28′30″W / 53.516°N 2.475°W | 1839 | |||
Notes: In 1839, James Burton built the Atherton Mill in Hindsford. This was the first of the group of mills he built near the Hindsford Brook. The site was later occupied by Ward and Goldstone.[10] | |||||
Atherton Mills (Victoria Mill) | Atherton SD 680,033 53°31′30″N 2°29′02″W / 53.525°N 2.484°W | ||||
Notes: In 1891 Victoria Mill on Bolton Old Road was operated by the Atherton Cotton Spinning Company. It had 69,000 spindles.[11] | |||||
Dan Lane Mills | Atherton SD 676,030 53°31′23″N 2°29′24″W / 53.523°N 2.490°W | ||||
Notes: Dan Lane Mill, constructed between Dan Lane and Lee Street around 1840, was the first large spinning and doubling mill in Atherton. Dan Lane was renamed Tyldesley Road when a new road through Hindsford was built around 1899.[12] In 1891 the mill was operated by the Lee Spinning Company and had 50,000 spindles. The company had a warehouse in Mosley Street, Manchester.[11] Most of the mill has been demolished but in May 2012 some disused buildings were set alight by youths.[13] | |||||
Ena Mill | G Temperley & Son | Atherton SD 673,035 53°31′37″N 2°29′42″W / 53.527°N 2.495°W | 1908 | Standing | 107 |
Notes: The five-storey Ena Mill or E Mill is a Grade II listed building built in red brick with buff decoration in 1908. It was designed by G Temperley & Son of Bolton. It has a two-storey extension for carding, a tower with a flat top and an engine house and chimney bearing its name.[14] Carrington Viyella operated it in the 1980s.[15] It is occupied by retail units and the Atherton Office of Wigan and Leigh Housing. | |||||
Field Mill | Atherton SD 686,022 53°30′58″N 2°28′44″W / 53.516°N 2.479°W | 1863 | |||
Notes: James Burton's Field Mill was built in 1856 in Lodge Lane at its junction with Printshop Lane in Hindsford just north of the Hindsford Brook.[10] In 1891 Burton's mills had 157,196 spindles and 570 looms weaving fine cambrics and shirtings.[16] | |||||
Howe Bridge Mills | Atherton SD 673,033 53°31′30″N 2°29′42″W / 53.525°N 2.495°W | 1868 | demolished | 97 | |
Notes: The first of six mills for Howe Bridge Mills on the north side of Mealhouse Lane was built in 1865 by directors of Fletcher Burrows, the company that owned coal mines at Howe Bridge. The last mill was built in 1919. In 1929 the company joined Combined Egyptian Mills and Howe Bridge Mills became the company's headquarters. The company's name changed to Combined English Mills in 1953 and subsequently was owned by Viyella. Numbers 2 and 5 mills were demolished in 1965.[17]The Howe Bridge Spinning Company was the fourth largest such company in Lancashire in 1891 with 250,000 spindles and in 1922 had 700,000 spindles.[18] | |||||
Laburnum Mills | Atherton SD 682,038 53°31′48″N 2°28′53″W / 53.530°N 2.4815°W | 1905 | |||
Notes: Laburnum Mill was a twin spinning mill on Upton Road near Atherton Central Station. The four-storey east mill was built in 1905 in red brick. It was 36 bays long with large rectangular windows and had a basement and a water tower with stone decoration and a dome behind balustrades. The west mill was built to a similar design. Its engine house had semi-circular arched windows with square windows above and had a tall circular chimney. Carrington Viyella operated the mill in the 1980s.[15] | |||||
Lodge Mill | Atherton SD 685,022 53°30′54″N 2°28′34″W / 53.515°N 2.476°W | 1853 | |||
Notes: Lodge Mill was built in 1853 by James Burton in Hindsford, close to the Hindsford Brook on Tyldesley Road at its junction with Lodge Lane.[10] | |||||
Westfield Mill | Atherton SD 682,022 53°30′54″N 2°28′48″W / 53.515°N 2.480°W | ||||
thumb|180px | Notes: Westfield Mill was the last of James Burton's mills built in Hindsford. It was next to Field Mill on Lodge Lane.[10]1853 | ||||
Bedford, Leigh
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Alder Mill | Stott and Sons | Leigh SJ 670,996 53°29′33″N 2°29′57″W / 53.4926°N 2.4991°W | 1907 | 1982 | 71 |
Notes: Alder Mill in Clyde Street, Bedford, Leigh, was designed by Henthorn Scott in 1907. It was a spinning mill five storeys high with a basement, engine house and single-story card room. Built in red brick with decorative terracotta bands the mill was 36 bays long and 15 bays wide with an ornate brick and terracotta water tower at its north-east corner. It had arched windows. In the 1980s it was operated by Carrington Vyella.[19]Its matching decorative office building was left standing after the mill's demolition and is a grade II listed building.[20] The mill had a 1,800 horsepower vertical triple expansion engine made by Browett, Lindley & Co.[21] | |||||
Bedford New Mills | Leigh SD 667,001 53°29′49″N 2°30′11″W / 53.497°N 2.503°W | ||||
Notes: Bedford New Mills was a late five-storey mill with large rectangular windows, a water tower with a dome and a tall circular chimney. Its engine house stood to the north and a reservoir was to the east. In the 1980s it was operated by Courtaulds.[19] Bedford New Mills was operated by Jones Brothers and Co in 1891. The mill had 53,000 spindles and 970 looms weaving twills, shirtings and cambrics. The company's Manchester warehouse was in York Street.[4] | |||||
Brook Mill | Leigh, SD 663,002 53°29′49″N 2°30′32″W / 53.497°N 2.509°W | ||||
Brookside Mill | Leigh SD 661,003 52°35′56″N 2°30′07″W / 52.599°N 2.502°W | ||||
Notes: Brookside Mill was a weaving shed on Charles Street owned by Gamble and Smith who also owned Welch Mill. In 1891 it housed 832 looms.[4] After closing the property was used for light engineering. | |||||
Butts Mill | Stott and Sons | Leigh SJ 667,994 53°29′28″N 2°30′10″W / 53.4910°N 2.5028°W | 1905 | Standing | 110 |
Notes: Built in by the Leigh branch of the Bridgewater Canal 1905 to the designs of Stott and Sons, the six-storey mill has a steel frame faced with red brick and a flat roof. It has an ornate tower with a terracotta Arts and Crafts details and parapet and is topped by a copper dome and finial. The mill was used for carding on the lower three floors and spinning on the upper. The carding floors have large nine-light rectangular windows separated by narrow brick piers while the spinning floors have narrower windows and brick panels. The mill's hoist tower is a single window wide capped by the mill's name BUTTS in white tiles. It was designed as a double mill but only half was built.[22] | |||||
Charles Street Mill | Leigh, SD 660,003 53°29′53″N 2°30′50″W / 53.498°N 2.514°W | ||||
Hall Lane Mill | Leigh, SJ 663,996 53°29′31″N 2°30′32″W / 53.492°N 2.509°W | ||||
Leigh Manufacturing Co. | Leigh, SJ 668,996 53°29′31″N 2°30′07″W / 53.492°N 2.502°W | ||||
Leigh Spinners | Bradshaw Gass & Hope | Leigh SJ 674,997 53°29′35″N 2°29′35″W / 53.493°N 2.493°W | 1913 | Standing | 102 |
Notes: Leigh Spinners or Leigh Mill, a double spinning mill, is a Grade II* listed building built in 1913 and 1923 close to the Bridgewater Canal. The east mill, boiler house and chimney were built in 1913 to the designs of Bradshaw, Gass & Hope and the west mill was completed to match in 1923. The mill's spinning machinery was supplied by Platt Brothers of Oldham and a Yates and Thom steam engine, one of a pair named Mayor and Mayoress, survives in working order.[23] | |||||
Mather Lane Mill | Bradshaw Gass & Hope | Leigh SJ 663,997 53°29′35″N 2°30′32″W / 53.493°N 2.509°W | 1883 | Standing | 132 |
Notes: The company was formed at a meeting in the Black Horse public house, Thomas Smith, a self-educated man was voted to the chair and Richard Thomas Marsh was managing director from its inception until 1920. The original mill's working capital was £60,000 when it became operational in 1878, a second mill opened in 1883 and the third in 1891. In the 1920s the company was merged into Combined Egyptian Mills Ltd.[24] Mather Lane Mill is a Grade II Listed cotton spinning mill on the north bank of the Bridgewater Canal. It was built in 1882 to the designs of Bradshaw and Gas and notable for severe classical elevations. It is an important early factory design by the architects and has features unusual for its date including a square plan, flat roof and partly internal engine house. The mill has six storeys and a basement built in brick in English garden wall bond with panelled pilaster at the corners. The three-storey carding sheds on the south side are parallel to the canal and set obliquely to main mill. Its engine house is on the north side and tower at the north-west corner is panelled with moulded string courses. It rises above parapet level where there are large lunettes below a blind arcade of round-headed arches, parapet and pyramidal roof. Its six by ten bays contain iron-framed windows. The east and west elevations have large windows with continuous central iron box columns rising through first to fourth floors. The north and south elevations have single-light windows. The interior has iron girders on Tuscan columns.[25] | |||||
Mather Lane Mill warehouse | Bradshaw Gass & Hope | Leigh SJ 664,996 53°29′31″N 2°30′29″W / 53.492°N 2.508°W | 1882 | ||
Notes: Mather Lane Mill's former warehouse on the opposite side of Mather Lane is a Grade II listed building, built around 1882, probably designed by Bradshaw and Gass of Bolton. It is a plain two-storey brick structure with three storeys overlooking the canal. It has hoists and taking-in bays on the front and canal elevations.[26] | |||||
Stanley Mill | Leigh SJ 665,997 53°29′35″N 2°30′22″W / 53.493°N 2.506°W | ||||
Notes: Stanley Mill was built on Duke Street, Bedford, north of the Bridgewater Canal. In 1891, it had 1,464 looms weaving muslins and shirtings. It was owned by the Pennington Mill Company.[4] | |||||
Golborne
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
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| |||||
Haigh
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Haigh Works | Haigh SD 582,082 53°34′08″N 2°37′59″W / 53.569°N 2.633°W | ||||
Notes: Haigh Works was a dye works. | |||||
Hindley
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Hindley Green Mills | Hindley, SD 635,034 53°31′34″N 2°33′07″W / 53.526°N 2.552°W | ||||
Prospect Mill | Stott and Sons | Hindley SD 618,042 53°31′59″N 2°34′41″W / 53.533°N 2.578°W | 1887 | ||
Notes: Prospect Mill was a weaving mill built in 1887 to the designs oF Scott and Sons It held 416 looms. In 1910 the water tower was built. It is now a business centre.[27] | |||||
Ince
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Crescent Mill | Ince, SD 597,055 53°32′42″N 2°36′36″W / 53.545°N 2.610°W | ||||
Empress Mill | Ince, SD 592,053 53°32′35″N 2°37′01″W / 53.543°N 2.617°W | ||||
Orrell
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Sandbrook Mill | Orrell, SD 526,041 53°31′52″N 2°43′01″W / 53.531°N 2.717°W | ||||
Pemberton
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Enfield Mill | Pemberton, SD 553,043 53°31′59″N 2°40′34″W / 53.533°N 2.676°W | ||||
May Mill | Pemberton SD 556,036 53°31′37″N 2°40′16″W / 53.527°N 2.671°W | 1889 | |||
Notes: May Mill was built in 1889. It was 50 bays long.[28] The mill was bought by the Lancashire Cotton Corporation and was operated by Courtaulds from the 1960s until it closed in 1980. | |||||
Pennington
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Avenue Mill | Pennington SJ 656,004 53°29′56″N 2°31′05″W / 53.499°N 2.518°W | ||||
Notes: William Guest owned Avenue Mill on Bridge Street, (now Leigh Road on the site of the Thomas Burke public house). In 1891 the mill housed 16,000 spindles.[4] | |||||
Brooklands Mill | Pennington SJ 664,996 54°23′28″N 2°31′08″W / 54.391°N 2.519°W | ||||
Notes: Brooklands Mill was built in brick in 1893 on the south bank of the Bridgewater Canal. It was five storeys high with a water tower, engine house and chimney. It was powered by a 1,200 h.p. cross-compound steam engine supplied by J & E Wood of Bolton.[29] | |||||
Etherstone Mill | Pennington SJ 670,996 53°29′38″N 2°31′41″W / 53.494°N 2.528°W | 1914 | |||
Notes: Etherstone Mill or Lilford Weaving Mill was a single storey weaving shed was built south of the Bridgewater Canal off Etherstone Street. Construction started in 1914 and the shell of the building was used in 1915 as a camp for German prisoners, many of whom were captured in the Battle of Mons. Whilst in use as a prisoner of war camp, a prisoner was shot trying to escape. Machinery was installed in 1920 and the mill began production. In 1954 it became part of English Sewing Cotton Company. The mill specialised in industrial cloths.[30] | |||||
Knott's Mill | Pennington SJ 640,980 53°28′41″N 2°32′35″W / 53.478°N 2.543°W | 1858 | |||
Notes: John Thorp built the first storey of the mill in 1858 and Joseph Knott completed it. In 1880 the company traded as John Knott and Sons. The Knotts disposed of it in 1892 when it was known as Buckleys Ltd. It became the Pennington Spinning Company and, in the great depression it was closed for many years. The mill closed in 1930, when the machinery was dismantled and the premises used for light engineering.[31] | |||||
Rose Mill | Pennington SJ 657,998 53°29′38″N 2°31′05″W / 53.494°N 2.518°W | ||||
Notes: Originally a silk mill, Rose Mill on Ellesmere Street, north of the Bridgewater Canal was later owned by Leigh Friendly Co-operative Society Ltd. It was a weaving shed with 578 looms producing fine shirtings and cambrics.[4] | |||||
Welch Hill Mill (Welch Mill) | Pennington SJ 653,999 53°29′42″N 2°31′30″W / 53.495°N 2.525°W | ||||
Notes: Welch Mill or Welch Hill Mill is situated west of Leigh Bridge on the Leigh branch of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal and started as a silk weaving mill. As the silk industry declined, the mill stood empty until taken over and converted to cotton weaving by Gamble and Smith (owners of Brookside Mill in Bedford) who manufactured fine cottons. It has been converted to other uses.[32] | |||||
Standish
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Bradley Mills | Standish, SD 572,112 53°35′46″N 2°38′53″W / 53.596°N 2.648°W | ||||
Standish Bleachworks | Standish SD 579,101 53°35′10″N 2°38′13″W / 53.586°N 2.637°W | ||||
Notes: Standish Bleachworks by the River Douglas, a former paper mill, was bought by T Taylor and Co and commenced bleaching operations in 1884. It was taken over by the Bradford Dyers’ Association Ltd in 1899, and dyeing was introduced but discontinued in 1907. The bleachworks used the Mayflower as its trademark. The works closed in 1998 and the site was used by small businesses. It was demolished and replaced by a housing estate in 2006. Some historic features including the engine house, electricity sub-station and a section of wall have been retained.[33] | |||||
Tyldesley
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Barnfield Mills | Bradshaw Gass & Hope | Tyldesley SD 689,022 53°30′58″N 2°28′12″W / 53.516°N 2.470°W | 1896 | demolished | 95 |
Notes: Barnfield Mills was a complex of six mills on either side of Union Street H P Barton and Caleb Wright built the first Barnfield Mill with 20,000 spindles on the west side of Union Street on a field known as Barnfield in 1851. By 1866 Wright had new partners, Peter and Charles Eckersley, and they built the second mill. In 1870 Caleb Wright and Company had a third spinning mill. Three more mills were built and the company employed 800 workers.[34] Barnfield No 6 was built on the site of Resolution Mill in 1894. After Wright's death, the company was acquired by the Fine Spinners and Doublers Association and subsequently by Courtaulds. Barnfield No 6 was built in brick with large rectangular windows and was six storeys high with a water tower with a dome at its south east corner. Its ornamental single-storey office block fronting onto Shuttle Street.[35] When built, No 6 Mill used the latest developments, it had concrete floors and was built to house self-acting mules, though it used the engine house from the old mill which powered the machines via a rope race. Ring spinning machinery was installed in the 20th century.[36] | |||||
Hindsford Cotton Mill | Tyldesley SJ 686,021 53°30′54″N 2°28′22″W / 53.5150°N 2.4728°W | ||||
Notes: Hindsford Cotton Mill was situated in Tyldesley by the Hindsford Brook on Little Factory Street. It was owned by Thomas Kirkpatrick and Sons and in 1891 had 19,120 spindles.[16] | |||||
Hope Cotton Mill | Tyldesley SJ 686,020 53°30′51″N 2°28′28″W / 53.5142°N 2.4744°W | ||||
Notes: A mill on James Street was built by Joseph Wilson in 1836. It was later acquired by Thomas Clegg who extended it and raised it by a storey. In 1853 it was known as Hope Mill.[37] In 1883 the spinning and doubling mill, manager's house, cottages in Clegg Street, Blenheim Street, James Street, Charles Street, Cross Street, Elliott Street and Factory Street were offered at auction. Its machinery was made by Dobson & Barlow, Platt Brothers, Howarth and Cryer and included 21 pairs of self-acting mules, 20 ring and 64 flyer doubling frames. Water to fill its lodges was obtained from wells on the premises.[38] Seven years later, building materials and machinery for part of the mill were offered at auction. The machinery included a horizontal high-pressure steam engine with a 28 inch cylinder by J & E Wood of Bolton, a low-pressure beam engine with a 43 inch cylinder, electrical apparatus by Siemens Brothers of London and shafting by Mather & Platt.[39] The spinning mill with 40,000 spindles was owned by Robert J. Clegg in 1891.[16] | |||||
Parr Bridge Mill | Mosley Common SJ 714,016 53°30′38″N 2°25′56″W / 53.5105°N 2.4322°W | 1859 | |||
Notes: Parr Bridge Mill, a weaving shed by the Honksford Brook in Mosley Common was built in 1859. It had several owners; Richard Farnworth in 1865 and John Jackson in 1869. Jones & Company who had a warehouse in Fountain Street Manchester owned it in 1872 and William Porritt in 1876. In 1879 Samuel Middleton had 150 looms there and an office in New Brown Street Manchester. Subsequent owners were the Forsyth Brothers and, after being disused for some time, in 1920 it was acquired by Robert Farnworth of Bolton. In its later years it made rayon fabric.[40] | |||||
Resolution Mill | Tyldesley SD 689,022 53°30′58″N 2°28′12″W / 53.516°N 2.470°W | 1823 | Demolished | 68 | |
Notes: Thomas Kearsley built Resolution Mill in 1823 at a cost of £5,000 and added to it by 1826 so that the mills took the shape of a letter L. It was located east of Union Street between Shuttle Street and Ellesmere Street. In 1838 Resolution Mills were the highest rated and most important in the town. By 1853 the mills were in the control of James Bayley and James Knott and Caleb Wright acquired them in the 1880s. They were destroyed by fire on 26 September 1891.[37] | |||||
Tyldesley Mill or New Mill | Tyldesley SJ 687,021 53°30′54″N 2°28′22″W / 53.5150°N 2.4728°W | ||||
Notes: Tyldesley Mill or Tyldesley New Mill was an early cotton spinning mill built for John Jones and Richard Jenning Jones on Castle Street and Factory Street.[41] James Burton was a partner in 1838 and took charge when the Jones brothers left to open a silk mill in Bedford.[10] Caleb Wright worked at the mill before starting his own venture. | |||||
Westleigh
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Kirkhall Lane Mills | Leigh SD 652,009 53°30′22″N 2°31′08″W / 53.506°N 2.519°W | ||||
Notes: William Hayes, brother of John and James, was a partner with Henry Isherwood in Kirkhall Lane Mills. After Hayes' death in 1869, his son, Thomas Travers Hayes, succeeded him and became sole owner in 1874. In 1849 the mill was known as Westleigh New Mill. Its steam engine was started up on Good Friday 1836 and the mill ran full-time through the cotton famine.[42] The mill had 44,748 spindles in 1891.[4] The mills were renamed Carrington Mills. | |||||
Victoria Mills (Hayes Mills) | Leigh SD 657,012 53°30′14″N 2°31′30″W / 53.5038°N 2.525°W | ||||
Notes: James and John Hayes built the first of the Victoria Mills off Kirkhall Lane in 1856. A second mill built soon after was ravaged by fire in 1864 and rebuilt in 1887. The fourth mill was dated 1878. The Hayes brothers were the first firm in Leigh to use long-stapled Egyptian cotton. In 1947 J. & J. Hayes amalgamated with Greenhalgh & Shaw of Bolton using the name Hayeshaw Ltd.[43] In 1891 the mills belonging to J. & J. Hayes housed 216,518 spindles.[4] | |||||
Wigan
Name | Architect | Location | Built | Demolished | Served (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Actons Mill | Wigan, SD 584,051 53°32′28″N 2°37′44″W / 53.541°N 2.629°W | ||||
Britannia Mill | Wigan, SD 576,053 53°32′35″N 2°38′28″W / 53.543°N 2.641°W | ||||
Dicconson Mills | Wigan, SD 630,073 53°33′40″N 2°33′36″W / 53.561°N 2.560°W | ||||
Douglas Mill | Wigan, SD 572,112 53°35′46″N 2°38′53″W / 53.596°N 2.648°W | ||||
Gidlow Mill or Pagefield Mill | George Woodhouse | Wigan SD 579,065 53°33′11″N 2°38′13″W / 53.553°N 2.637°W | 1865 | ||
Notes: Gidlow Mill, to the north of Mesnes Park, was built in 1865 to designs by George Woodhouse for John Rylands and was once the centre of his extensive business. It replaced an earlier mill. The complex, which includes the spinning mill, weaving sheds engine house and chimney is a Grade II listed building. The mill is constructed in red brick with details in blue and white brick which was unusual for its date. Its roof has multiple ridges covered in Welsh slate. Its floors were supported on cast iron columns.[44] The mill was of fireproof construction. Cotton was received into the upper levels of the spinning mill and progressed downwards in contrast to other mills.[45] There are proposals to convert the building for residential use.[46] It had two 460HP twin cylinder J. Musgrave engines with 40in cylinders and a 6ft stroke running at 42rpm on steam at 80psi. The 19ft flywheel drove geared drives. It was converted by Sharples to a 140 psi triple expansion engine in 1900 possibly when the mules were replaced by ring frames. | |||||
Parkside Mills | Wigan, SJ 605,976 53°28′26″N 2°35′49″W / 53.474°N 2.597°W | ||||
Pendle Mill | Wigan, SJ 669,995 53°29′28″N 2°30′00″W / 53.491°N 2.500°W | ||||
Pennyhurst Mill | Wigan, SD 576,053 53°32′35″N 2°38′28″W / 53.543°N 2.641°W | ||||
Princess Street Mill | Wigan, SD 582,051 53°32′28″N 2°37′55″W / 53.541°N 2.632°W | ||||
Signal Mill | Wigan, SD 526,041 53°31′52″N 2°43′01″W / 53.531°N 2.717°W | ||||
Swan Meadow Mills | Wigan SD 577,050 53°32′24″N 2°38′24″W / 53.540°N 2.640°W | ||||
Notes: Swan Meadow Mill was built by James Eckersley in 1827 and became Old Mill when a new, larger mill was built in 1838. It was demolished in 1960 followed in 1963 by the larger mill. James Eckersley and Sons had three four-storey mills by 1880.[47] Musgraves of Bolton supplied a tandem compound steam engine in 1884.[48] Eckersleys ran six spinning mills and two weaving sheds in the town, Swan Meadow Old, Swan Meadow large, Water Heyes, and Western Mills No.1, No.2 and No.3. The mills housed a total of 236,572 ring spindles, 14,554 mule spindles and 1687 looms.[49] | |||||
Swan Meadow Mills (part) | Wigan SD 576,050 53°32′24″N 2°38′28″W / 53.540°N 2.641°W | ||||
Notes: Swan Meadow Mill was built by James Eckersley in 1827 and became Old Mill when a new, larger mill was built in 1838. It was demolished in 1960 followed in 1963 by the larger mill.[47] | |||||
Trencherfield Mill | Wigan SD 578,051 53°32′28″N 2°38′17″W / 53.541°N 2.638°W | ||||
Notes: Trencherfield Mill was a cotton spinning mill built in1907-8 to designs by Potts, Son and Hennings in an Edwardian Baroque style. The four-storey mill has an iron and steel frame clad in red brick with buff coloured terracotta details. The main range has 15 bays demarcated by brick pilasters each with two windows up to the third floor and three-light windows with mullions on the fourth. The top floor has a sillband decorated with terracotta. Its original 4-cylinder triple-expansion tandem steam engine by J & E Wood of Bolton remains in situ in working order. The mill has been altered and converted to workshops, warehouses, offices and a museum.[50][51] | |||||
Upper Mills | Wigan, SJ 600,979 53°28′34″N 2°36′14″W / 53.476°N 2.604°W | ||||
Victoria Mills | William Fairbairn | Wigan SD 576,053 53°32′35″N 2°38′28″W / 53.543°N 2.641°W | 1840 | ||
Notes: Victoria Mill was built around 1840 by William Fairbairn. Only a part remains.[51] | |||||
Western Mill No.1 | Stott and Sons | Wigan SD 576,050 53°32′24″N 2°38′28″W / 53.540°N 2.641°W | 1883 | Standing | 132 |
Notes: Western Number 1 is one of a group of mills designed by A H Stott for Farington Eckersley close to Wigan Pier. It is an integrated mill with a spinning block with integral engine house, chimney, re-elling and winding rooms, weaving shed and warehouse. It is dated 1884 on the parapet above the entrance bay. The spinning block is built in red brick with a plinth of blue engineering brick and sandstone dressings. It is a Grade II listed building.[52] Between them, Eckersley's mills housed 236,572 ring spindles, 14,554 mule spindles and 1687 looms.[49] | |||||
Western Mill No.2 | Stott and Sons | Wigan SD 576,050 53°32′24″N 2°38′28″W / 53.540°N 2.641°W | 1888 | Standing | 127 |
Notes: Western Number 2, dated 1888, is one of a group of mills designed by A H Stott for Farington Eckersley close to Wigan Pier. It is an integrated mill comprising a spinning block with boiler house, engine house and chimney, winding and beaming rooms. Its weaving shed has been demolished. The four-storey spinning block is built of common brick with sandstone dressings and has a concealed roof. Its two-storey winding and beaming rooms have a deep basement. Its chimney has a plinth of blue engineering brick and tapered octagonal shaft. It is a Grade II listed building.[53] Between them, Eckersley's mills housed 236,572 ring spindles, 14,554 mule spindles and 1687 looms.[49] | |||||
Western Mill No.3 | Stott and Sons | Wigan SD 576,050 53°32′24″N 2°38′28″W / 53.540°N 2.641°W | 1899 | Standing | 116 |
Notes: Western Number 3 Mill, dated 1900, is one of a group of mills designed by A H Stott for Farington Eckersley close to Wigan Pier. It was a spinning mill with a boiler house, chimney and engine house, and a beaming and re-elling block. The mill is used as a warehouse. The four-storey mill is built of common brick with sandstone dressings and has a concealed roof. It has a square tower rising above the parapet.[54] Between them, Eckersley's mills housed 236,572 ring spindles, 14,554 mule spindles and 1687 looms.[49] | |||||
Wharfe Mill | Wigan, SD 582,051 53°32′28″N 2°37′55″W / 53.541°N 2.632°W | ||||
Whittaker's Mill | Wigan, SD 579,065 53°33′11″N 2°38′13″W / 53.553°N 2.637°W | ||||
Williams Street Works | Wigan, SD 664,001 53°29′49″N 2°30′29″W / 53.497°N 2.508°W | ||||
Wood Street Mill | Wigan, SD 584,051 53°32′28″N 2°37′44″W / 53.541°N 2.629°W | ||||
See also
References
Notes
- ↑ Freeman, Rodgers & Kinvig 1968, p. 67
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Wigan, Spinning the Web, Manchester Library and Information Service, retrieved 10 July 2012
- ↑ LeighTownTrail Part1 (PDF), Wigan.gov.uk, pp. 14–15, retrieved 9 July 2012
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 Leigh and Bedford Leigh (p111), Grace's Guide, retrieved 27 June 2012
- ↑ LeighTownTrail Part1 (PDF), Wigan.gov.uk, pp. 18–19, retrieved 9 July 2012
- ↑ Leigh Town Trail Maps (PDF), Wigan.gov.uk, retrieved 9 July 2012
- ↑ Lunn 1971, p. 76
- ↑ Cotton Mills in Leigh and Bedford Leigh 1891 Astley 3 miles E. from Leigh (p111), Grace's Guide, retrieved 16 June 2012
- ↑ Lunn 1971, p. 85
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 Lunn 1953, p. 114
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Atherton. 2.5 miles N.N.E. from Leigh (p111), Grace's Guide, retrieved 25 June 2012
- ↑ Lunn 1968, p. 194
- ↑ Mill fire danger, The Leigh Reporter, retrieved 27 June 2012
- ↑ Historic England. "Ena Mill, Flapper Fold Lane (1253159)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Ashmore 1982, p. 80
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 Tyldesley. 2 miles E.N.E. from Leigh (p113), Grace's Guide, retrieved 27 June 2012
- ↑ Lunn 1971, p. 180
- ↑ Williams 1992, pp. 32–33
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 Ashmore 1982, p. 103
- ↑ Historic England. "Alder Mill Office, including entrance gate to west (1309364)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
- ↑ Browett, Lindley and Co, Grace's Guide, retrieved 15 July 2012
- ↑ Historic England. "Butts Mill (1253426)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
- ↑ Historic England. "Leigh Mill, Park Lane (1253119)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
- ↑ Lunn 1958, p. 268
- ↑ Historic England. "Mather Lane Mill (1356246)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
- ↑ Historic England. "Former warehouse immediately north west of Dick Mather Bridge, Mather Lane (1261878)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 July 2012.
- ↑ Pollard, Pevsner & Sharples 1995, p. 200
- ↑ Ashmore 1982, p. 148
- ↑ Ashmore 1982, p. 104
- ↑ Lunn 1958, p. 293
- ↑ Lunn 1958, p. 93
- ↑ Wigan Pier to Leigh Bridge (PDF), Manchester's Countryside.com, retrieved 16 July 2012
- ↑ Mayflower, Standish Conservation Area Appraisal April 2010 (PDF), Wigan.gov.uk, p. 13, retrieved 16 September 2012
- ↑ Lunn 1958, p. 141
- ↑ Ashmore 1982, p. 144
- ↑ Historic England, "Barnfield Mill (1302494 )", PastScape, retrieved 17 September 2012
- ↑ 37.0 37.1 Lunn 1953, p. 107
- ↑ "Sales Auction, POSTPONED TO MONDAY, 3rd SECOND SALE. ft ...". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser (British Newspaper Archive). 1 September 1883. Retrieved 7 August 2014. (subscription required (help)).
- ↑ "Safes ftp On View This Day. Hill.—Sale Capital ...". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser (British Newspaper Archive). 3 May 1890. Retrieved 7 August 2014. (subscription required (help)).
- ↑ Lunn 1953, p. 128
- ↑ Why did Tyldesley cotton spinners go on strike in 1823?, Tyldesley and District Historical Society, retrieved 7 July 2012
- ↑ Lunn 1958, p. 176
- ↑ Lunn 1958, p. 183
- ↑ Historic England. "Pagefield Building of Wigan College of Technology (1384455)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ↑ Pevsner, Pollard & Sharples 2006, p. 674.
- ↑ Pagefield Building, Wigan, Architectural History Practice, retrieved 14 September 2012
- ↑ 47.0 47.1 Eckersley Mill's, savewigan.co.uk, retrieved 15 September 2012
- ↑ Ashmore 1969, p. 320
- ↑ 49.0 49.1 49.2 49.3 Eckersleys
- ↑ Historic England. "Trencherfield Mill (1384508)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
- ↑ 51.0 51.1 Pevsner, Pollard & Sharples 2006, p. 675.
- ↑ Historic England. "Swan Meadow Western Works Number 1 Mill (1384527)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ↑ Historic England. "Swan Meadow Western Works Number 2 Mill (1384528)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ↑ Historic England. "Swan Meadow Western Works Number 3 Mill (1384529)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
Bibliography
- Ashmore, Owen (1969), Industrial Archaeology of Lancashire, David & Charles
- Ashmore, Owen (1982), The industrial archaeology of North-west England, Manchester University Press, ISBN 0-7190-0820-4
- Freeman, T.W.; Rodgers, H. B.; Kinvig, M. A. (1968), Lancashire, Cheshire and the Isle of Man, Nelson
- Lunn, John (1971), A short history of the township of Astley, Lunn
- Lunn, John (1968), Atherton, Lancashire, A manorial social and industrial history, Atherton District Council
- Lunn, John (1958), History of Leigh, Leigh Borough Council
- Lunn, John (1953), A Short History of the Township of Tyldesley, Tyldesley Urban District Council
- Pevsner, Nikolaus; Pollard, Richard; Sharples, Joseph (2006), Buildings of England: Liverpool and the southwest, Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-10910-5
- Williams, Mike; Farnie (1992), Cotton Mills in Greater Manchester, Carnegie Publishing, ISBN 0-948789-89-1
External links
- Aerial view of Laburnum Mills, Atherton.
- Aerial view of Dan Lane Mills, Atherton
- Aerial view of Trencherfield Mill
- Aerial view of Gidlow Works