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  2. Mills in Canterbury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mills_in_Canterbury

    A total of six windmills are known to have stood in Canterbury. St Martin's Mill , (TR 165 578 51°16′41″N 1°06′11″E  /  51.278°N 1.103°E  / 51.278; 1.103 ) a tower mill built in 1817 and working until 1890, now a house conversion

  3. Textile manufacture during the British Industrial Revolution

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_manufacture_during...

    The first moves towards manufactories called mills were made in the spinning sector. The move in the weaving sector was later. By the 1820s, all cotton, wool, and worsted was spun in mills; but this yarn went to outworking weavers who continued to work in their own homes. A mill that specialized in weaving fabric was called a weaving shed.

  4. Linsey-woolsey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linsey-woolsey

    Linsey-woolsey was an important fabric in the Colonial America due to the relative scarcity of wool in the colonies. [2] Many sources [ 5 ] say it was used for whole-cloth quilts , and when parts of the quilt wore out the remains would be cut up and pieced into patchwork quilts .

  5. John Foster (textile manufacturer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Foster_(textile...

    John Foster Black Dyke Mills, Queensbury. John Foster (1798–1879) was a British manufacturer of worsted cloth. [1] He was the son of a colliery owner and farmer in Bradford, West Yorkshire. In 1819 he married Ruth Briggs, daughter of a landowner from Queensbury, on the outskirts of Bradford.

  6. Fulling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulling

    Scotswomen walking (fulling) woollen cloth, singing a waulking song, 1772 (engraving made by Thomas Pennant on one of his tours). Fulling, also known as tucking or walking (Scots: waukin, hence often spelt waulking in Scottish English), is a step in woollen clothmaking which involves the cleansing of woven cloth (particularly wool) to eliminate oils, dirt, and other impurities, and to make it ...

  7. Medieval English wool trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_English_wool_trade

    Sheep pen (Luttrell Psalter) Sheep shearing as depicted in Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry.Subsistence-level production of wool continued, [8] but was overshadowed by the rise of wool as a commodity, which in turn encouraged demand for other raw materials such as dyestuffs; the rise of manufacturing; the financial sector; urbanisation; and (since wool and related raw materials had a ...

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