Malcolm Bull's Calderdale Companion : Foldout

The Woollen Industry


This Foldout looks at some aspects of the local woollen industry:

A brief history of the woollen industry

England has a long history as a producer and exporter of wool.

In mediæval Britain, many sagas – woollen cloaks – were produced in Mercia for export to France. In the 8th century, Charlemagne is recorded complaining to Offa about the variation in size of the cloaks.

From the 12th and 13th centuries, most parts of the country manufactured cloth.

Henry III favoured foreign connections – especially the people of Flanders who processed much English wool – and this annoyed many Englishmen with the result that, in 1258, a Great Council, headed by Simon de Montfort, ordered that:

the wool of the country should be worked up in England and not sold to foreigners, and that everyone should use woollen cloth made within this country

However, this was likely to upset the Flemish – our allies against the French – and people in England still had a liking for the cloth of Flanders. One solution was to improve the quality of the home-produced cloth. In 1271, the government declared that:

all workers of woollen cloths, both male and female, as well of Flanders as of other lands, may safely come into our realm, there to make cloths, upon the understanding that those who shall so come and make such cloths shall be quit of toll and tallage and of payment of other customs for their work until the end of 5 years

Nothing happened for several years, during which time the English woollen industry declined considerably.

In 1326, Edward II ordered that:

... no cloth which was manufactured outside England, Ireland and Wales could be bought in this country, except by kings, queens, earls, barons, knights, ladies and their legitimate children, archbishops, bishops, and others who spend £40 a year of their rents

In 1331, Edward III invited foreign cloth-workers to England, including a number of Flemish weavers, and settled them in Norfolk and in Yorkshire. Seventy families came in the first year. He then imposed a tax of 50/- per pack for wool exports, and a further tax on imported cloth. This was the founding of the clothing industry in the West Riding. Manufacture on a small-scale began around 1414.

In 1496, the Magnus Intercursus encouraged the export of wool to the Netherlands.

Large-scale manufacture of woollen cloth is thought to have begun in Worcester in 1534, and was England's chief industry until the middle of the 18th century, being carried on in East Anglia, the south-west of England, and the West Riding of Yorkshire.

In 1615, the Merchant Adventurers Company was granted a monopoly on the export of British cloth.

The history of sheep farming and the local woollen industry is suggested by a gravestone which stands in the porch of Halifax Parish Church. The stone is dated to about 1150 and shows a pair of shears.

Any success in the Halifax district came because the land was suitable for sheep-rearing, and the water from the rivers and streams allowed the raw materials to be washed and the woollen fabric to be produced, although the local wool was often too coarse and producers bought much wool from other areas – such as Lincolnshire and the North Riding. Kersey was the main product.

In 1473, cloth production in Halifax was greater than in any other part of the West Riding, and this continued for more than 300 years. The Halifax Act of 1555, suggests that fine wool production came late to the district.

William Camden wrote that

The number of men in Halifax was greater than the total of cows, horses, sheep and other animals

because – unlike much of the country – the people of Halifax lived making cloth by the domestic system and not by farming. The domestic system often involved yeoman clothiers. In 1586, he wrote:

The people of Halifax have so flourished by the cloth trade, which within these last 70 years they fell to, that they are both very rich and have gained a great reputation for it above that of their neighbours

Women have always been employed in every branch of the woollen industry and were eligible as members of the guilds. In his Canterbury Tales, Chaucer's wife of Bath:

... of cloth-making she had such an haunt [practice]
she [sur]passed them of Ypres and of Ghent

In the 17th century, during the reign of James II, a great many Huguenot weavers fled from France to England. In order to encourage the home woollen trade, Charles II passed a law in 1665 requiring that the dead be buried in woollen shrouds, and that an affidavit be made to confirm this; a penalty of £1 was liable if the law was ignored. The Act was repealed in 1814.

From the early 19th century, cloth, often of inferior quality, was manufactured wholly or partly from reclaimed wool. See Heavy Woollen District and Recovered wool industry.

The industry thrived through the mediæval and into the Victorian era, its heyday. More recently, there were considerable downturns in the industry as a result of the slump after World War I. The home market revived in the 1930/1940s, but the 1950s saw the appearance of man-made fibres in the clothing and carpet market, and the industry declined from 1965 onwards. Many businesses suffered, but some local textile firms survived by adapting to the changing markets.

Terms used in textile production

The following terms were used in the local textile industries

Autoclaving

Back
Bale
Batting
Beetling Beetle
Billy
Bleaching
Blending
Bracken
Bunch
Burl
Burling

Calender
Calendering
Carbonising
Carding
Combing
Conditioning
Cop
Cottoning
Course
Crabbing
Cropping

Damping
Dewing
Doff
Doubling
Drafting
Drawing
Dressing
Drying
Dyes & dyeing

Extract

Fearnaught
Fearnoughting
Felt
Fibre
Finishing
Flock
Fretting
Frizing
Fulling

Garnetting
Gassing
Gig
Gig mill
Gilling
Ginning
Glazing

Hank
Heckle
Hooker

Jerry

Knop

Lap
Lecking
Lustring

Mender
Mending
Mercerisation
Milling
Mozing
Mungo

Nap
Nelly
Neps
Noil

Overlooker

Perching
Picking
Piecer
Pirning
Pot o' Four

Raising
Retting
Ring spinning
Roving

Scouring
Scribbling
Scutching
Seaming
Selvage
Shoddy
Singeing
Sizing
Slub
Sorting
Souring
Spinning
Staple
Swift

Teasel plant
Teasing
Thrum
Top
Tumming
Twisting

Wale
Washing
Waulking
Weaving
Weeting
Willeying
Willow
Winding
Woolcomber
Woolstapler
Wuzzing



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© Malcolm Bull 2017 / [email protected]
Revised 14:15 on 8th May 2017 / mmw162 / 15