Muss On 1960
Muss On 1960
Muss On 1960
3
See the Victoria County History, Lancaster, II, 367-74, for the nineteenth-century develop-
ments.
4
See C. Singer, E. J. Holmyard, A. R. Hall, and T. I. Williams, eds., A History of Tech-
nology, IV: The Industrial Revolution c. 1750-c. 1850 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1958),
chs. xiii and xiv. A great deal of interesting material is also to be found in the Newcomen
Society's Transactions. Much older works, but still very useful, are C. H. and J. J. Holtzapffel,
Turning and Mechanical Manipulation (4 vols.; London, 1843), a "d R- Willis, "Machines and
Tools, for Working in Metal, Wood, and other Materials," Lectures on the Results of the
Great Exhibition delivered before the Society of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (London,
1852), pp. 291-320.
Origins of Engineering- 211
might be employed to make machinery or set up millwork. We even
hear of a "Mechanical Priest in Lancashire," at the beginning of the
eighteenth century, who was apparently an expert in the construction
of windmills for draining mines.5
At a fairly early date, however, a special class of millwrights emerged,
who were of particular importance in setting up the early mills and
factories, and from whom sprang many of the early engineers. James
Brindley and John Rennie were perhaps the two most famous
millwright-engineers in the eighteenth century, and well into the
nineteenth century well-known engineers began in the same way. The
eighteenth-century millwright, says Fairbairn (himself originally a
millwright), was "a kind of jack-of-all-trades, who could with equal
facility work at the lathe, the anvil, or the carpenter's bench. . . . He
could handle the axe, the hammer, and the plane with equal skill and
precision; he could turn, bore, or forge . . ." He generally had a good
knowledge of arithmetic, geometry, and theoretical as well as practical
mechanics.6 It appears, in fact, that these millwright-engineers were not
—as is often suggested—rough, empirical, illiterate workmen, but had
usually acquired somehow a fairly good education or training.
Since wood was extensively used in the making of early machinery,
there was a close link between the development of woodworking and
metal-working machines such as lathes, planes, and drills.7 The con-
nection is well-known in the case of Bramah and Maudslay at the end
of the eighteenth century, but it is a good deal older. Iron was to become
the basic material of the Industrial Revolution. There was, as Professor
Ashton and others have shown, a close relationship between the Mid-
land iron industry and the manufacture of the steam engine—the
supreme achievement of early mechanical engineering. Unfortunately,
we do not know much about the actual making of the early Savery and
Newcomen engines, but we do know a considerable amount about the
manufacture of Watt's engines.8 Watt experienced great difficulties at
first in getting sufficiently accurate workmanship, but these were largely
overcome by the skilled metal workers in Boulton's Soho factory and by
John Wilkinson's cylinder-boring machine. The latter has been de-
5
R . Bald, A General View of the Coal Trade of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1812), p. 7.
6
W. Fairbairn, A Treatise on Mills and Millwor\ (2 vols.; London, 1861-63), I> v—vi.
7
Willis, "Machines and Tools."
8
S. Smiles, Lives of the Engineers, IV: The Steam Engine: Boulton and Watt (rev. ed.; Lon--
don, 1878). H. W. Dickinson and R. Jenkins, James Watt and the Steam Engine (Oxfords-
Oxford University Press, 1927).
212 A. E. Musson and E. Robinson
scribed as "probably the first metal-working tool capable of doing
large heavy work with anything like present-day accuracy," 9 but there
were earlier boring and drilling machines in existence; Wilkinson, like
Smeaton some years earlier, merely improved existing techniques. The
Darbys of Coalbrookdale and other iron founders also made parts for
Watt engines.
Following the Darbys' revolutionary achievements in iron founding,
cast iron came into widespread use for machine parts. Cort's process
provided in the later eighteenth century ample quantities of wrought
iron; but production of accurate, standardized machinery in quantity
necessitated the development of mechanical methods—machine tools—
instead of the laborious, costly, and insufficiently precise hand processes.
Workmen, however, in the early stages of the Industrial Revolution
were not, as is often suggested, dependent solely on hammer, chisel, and
file. There were, as Smiles admits, some "ill-constructed lathes with
some drills and boring machines of a rude sort" in the later eighteenth
century,10 and Fairbairn, as we have seen, similarly refers, though
disparagingly, to lathes and drills then in use. We know, in fact, that
such tools have a long history. In their development, clock and instru-
ment makers appear to have been particularly important. Professor
Willis pointed out in his Great Exhibition lecture over a hundred years
ago that the early engineering machine tools probably evolved from the
lathes and wheel-cutting engines of the clock- and watchmaking trade.11
Several eminent eighteenth-century engineers, such as Watt and
Smeaton, were instrument makers, and it has recently been shown that
clock- and instrument-making was of particular interest and of con-
siderable practical importance to Boulton and Watt in their de-
velopment of engineering technique for accurate manufacture of
steam-engine parts.12 Other metal-working crafts likewise contributed
to mechanical engineering. In the Birmingham trades such as button
making, for example, various machines for stamping, pressing, and cut-
ting metal were developed. Many of these were included in the long
list of tools and engines whose export was prohibited in 1785-1786,
along with ladies, drills, and boring engines.13
9
J. W. Roc, English and American Tool Builders (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1916),
p. 11.
10
S. Smiles, Industrial Biography (London, 1863), p. 180.
11
Willis, "Machines and Tools," pp. 306-7.
12
E. Robinson, "The Lunar Society and the Improvement of Scientific Instruments," Annals
of Science, XII (Dec. 1956), 296-304.
13
Statutes, 25 Geo. Ill, c.67 (1785), and 26 Geo. Ill, c.89 (1786).
Origins of Engineering 213
II
21
But see p. 219 of this article for its earlier appearance in local newspapers.
22
Perrins first came to Manchester in 1789 as an engine erector for Boulton and Watt.
2
<* Aikin, Description of the Country . . . around Manchester, pp. 176—78.
216 A. E. Musson and E. Robinson
many articles are made, even to nails. [Aikin then mentions various ironfound-
ing firms in Manchester and Salford, making steam engines, boilers, etc., which
we shall deal with later.24] . . . The tin-plate works have found additional em-
ployment in furnishing many articles for spinning machines; as have also the
braziers in casting wheels for the motion-work of the rollers used in them; and
the clockmakers in cutting them. Harness-makers have been much employed in
making bands for carding engines, and large wheels for the first operation of
drawing out the cardings, whereby the consumption of strong curried leather
has been much increased. ,
When a company intended to erect such a [spinning] mill, a spot was selected
which promised sufficient [water] power, and was also convenient for working
people. . . . An engineer was sent to superintend the works; he generally brought
with him such workmen as he deemed necessary for the undertaking; but, if he
could not accomplish that, he was under the necessity of supplying the defect by
engaging such as the locality afforded. It is almost needless to state, that those
artizans were a medley of trades. . . . Amongst them, the millwright at that
time claimed the pre-eminence; the rest were composed of carpenters, joiners,
smiths, clockmakers, who left their original trades for better wages; moulders
and turners were then little known, the work being chiefly composed of wood,
brass, malleable iron, and steel. Professional turners being then very rare, each
artizan was under the necessity of learning to turn his own part. The moulding
part being brass, had to be sent for some distance, and at great expence. The work
was all done in places where it had to remain.
The writer goes on to state that when such a mill was completed,
many of the engineering workmen would be dismissed, but that "it
was still necessary to retain a part of them on the premises, there being,
24
See pp. 224-25 of this article.
25
Preserved among material deposited in the Economics Library of Manchester University
by Messrs. Dobson and Barlow, Ltd., textile engineers, of Bolton, and quoted by G. W. Daniels
in "A 'Turn-Out' of Bolton Machine-Makers in 1831," Economic History, I (Jan. 1929),
592-95-
28
Aikin states: "It was about the year 1784 that the expiration of Sir Richard Arkwright's
patent caused the erection of water machines [water frames] for the spinning of warps in all
parts of the country, with which the hand engines [jennies] for the spinning of weft kept
proportion." Description of the Country . . . around Manchester, p. 179. See also Baines,
Cotton Manufacture, p. 214.
Origins of Engineering 217
at that time, no machine shops, and the apparatus must be kept
in order." It was not long, however, before machine making became a
specialized trade:
After the mills had been a few years established, some thrifty part of the men
who had been employed in them began to study their own interest. They found
the business lucrative and resolved to have a share in it. Some small shops were
established for the construction of such machinery as could be constructed out of
the mills, and I believe carding engines were the first things of the kind so
undertaken; afterwards other parts of the apparatus began to appear in the
shops, such as the jenny . . . and afterwards the mule. . . . Machinery began
at this time to be improved, workshops spread themselves over the country . . .
46
J. Rennie (London) to M. Boulton (Birmingham), November 19, 1791, Rennie Box, ibid.
4T
A. E. Musson and E. Robinson, "The Early Growth of Steam Power," Economic History
Review, 2d ser., XI (1958-59), 427-28.
48
Manchester Mercury, November 14, 1788.
49
R. Dossie, Memoirs of Agriculture, and other Oeconomical Arts (1768), I, 197.
B® Aikin, Description of the Country . . . around Manchester, pp. 172-73.
51
Wadsworth and Mann, The Cotton Trade, p. 473.
52
Baines, Cotton Manufacture, pp. 143 and 148-49.
68
Ibid., p. 153.
54
See p. 223 of this article.
222 A. E. Musson and E. Robinson
making cotton machines, we find that they have almost as much to
learn as if they had never learnt any working in metal at all. . . . We
have found them quite insufficient to do any ordinary filing and turn-
ing . . ." B5 James Lawson, Boulton and Watt's northern agent in
the 1790's also considered the Prescot watch movement makers un-
suitable for engineering, since "they had only been used to small
work—such as making watch hands and little watch work," while
watch-tool makers could not be got "without great wages—and none
that I saw had been used to any such work as you [Boulton and Watt]
wanted." 56 The weight of the other evidence which we have discovered,
however, indicates that dock-, if not watch-, makers, and above all
clock-tool makers, were in very great demand for textile-machine
making and contributed materially to the early growth of engineering.
Ill
A great deal of the early textile machinery was made under the
direction of the millowners themselves, who frequently combined
cotton spinning with machine making. The two activities, in fact,
remained closely associated far into the nineteenth century.67 On the
other hand, there are several examples of craftsmen setting up first
of all as machine makers and then going over to cotton spinning. It
is about some such firms that we have most information. Peter
Atherton, for example, who appears to have been originally an in-
strument maker at Warrington,58 and who established for himself a
very high engineering reputation, also built cotton mills in both Liver-
pool and Manchester. When at Warrington, he was approached by
Arkwright and Kay, the Warrington clockmaker, to help make the
first water frame, and "agreed to lend Kay a smith and watch-tool
maker, to make the heavier part of the engine, and Kay undertook to
make the clockmaker's part of it . . ." 5 9 Atherton continued till his
death in 1799 to manufacture textile machinery as well as cotton. In the
advertisement of the sale of his Liverpool warehouses, it is very
56
5. C. on Artisans and Machinery, Fourth Report, in Pad. Papers, 1824, V, 251.
58
J. Lawson to M. Boulton, November 28, 1797, Assay Office, Birmingham.
57
D. A. Farnie, "The English Cotton Industry, 1850-1896" (unpublished M.A. thesis,
Manchester University, 1953), ch. iv.
58
Baines, Cotton Manufacture, p. 150.
59
Ibid., quoting J. Aikin and W. Enfield, General Biography (1799), I, 391. See also D. P.
Davies, A New Historical and Descriptive View of Derbyshire (Belper, 1811), p. 489.
Origins of Engineering 223
interesting to find, in addition to a large and varied assortment of
carding, drawing, roving, and spinning machines,
2 capital Clock-maker's Cutting Engines, for Mill use; a Fluting Engine for
Fluting Iron Rollers; . . . a very valuable Cap Engine, for Watch Caps, &c. a
great variety of excellent and valuable Tools for Smiths' and Mill use, consisting
of Dies and Taps, Screw Stocks, &c . . . a great variety of Tools, for making
Patent Jack Boxes, Guages, &c. a Fluting Engine, for fluting Wood Blocks for
Jack Boxes; Wood and Iron Lathes, and Hand Lathes; and . . . several Wheels
for turning Lathes; and an assortment of Smiths' Tools, Bellows, and Grinding
Stones . . . ; a large quantity of Turners' Tools, Joiners' Tools, Benches, &c. A
variety of capital Tools for Clock-makers; an assortment of Files . . .60
60
Manchester Mercury, September 17, 1799.
81
J. Kennedy, "A brief notice of my early recollections," in Miscellaneous Papers, pp. 1-18.
D. C. McConnel, Facts and Traditions collected for a Family Record (Manchester, privately
printed, 1861).
62
They formed a partnership in 1791, together with Benjamin and William Sandford, two
well-to-do fustian warehousemen, who provided most of the capital. McConnel, Facts and
Traditions, pp. 137-8; Kennedy, Miscellaneous Papers, p. 17. They appeared in the 1794
Manchester directory as "cotton-spinners and machine-makers."
63
For a brief history of McConnel and Kennedy, see A Century of Fine Cotton Spinning,
iygo-igo6 (Manchester, 1906), issued by the firm.
64
Kennedy, Miscellaneous Papers, p. 9; McConnel, Facts and Traditions, p. 133. In the
1794 Manchester directory Adam Murray is described as a machine maker, in that of 1797 as
a cotton spinner.
224 A. E. Musson and E. Robinson
Robert Owen has left us an interesting account of how, about the
same time, he first set up in business in Manchester, in partnership
with a man named Jones, making cotton-spinning machinery.65 Owen
himself had no previous experience of textile engineering, having been
brought up in the drapery business, but Jones was a small wire manu-
facturer who had acquired some knowledge of spinning machines.66
They used "wood, iron, and brass for their construction," and in 1792
Jones (who had by then broken with Owen) was advertising for "a
good Joiner or two accustomed to fit up Mules and Water Machinery,"
and for "a good Turner, Iron Filer, and a Smith." 67
Peter Ewart, another of the leading Manchester cotton spinners,
brother of William Ewart, John Gladstone's partner in the Liverpool
trade, was trained as a millwright under John Rennie and later
secured employment with Boulton and Watt.68 Towards the end
of 1790 he was appointed Boulton and Watt's agent in Manchester,
where he also set up as a millwright on his own account.69 He erected
some of the first Boulton and Watt steam engines in Lancashire mills,
from which he himself secured orders for the millwork (shafting,
gearing, etc.). In September 1792, however, he went into partnership
with Samuel Oldknow, the famous cotton spinner in a bleaching and
calico-printing business, which he considered more profitable than
millwrighting; 70 but the partnership was dissolved after a year and
Ewart returned to engineering. In 1798, however, he went into cotton
spinning as partner of Samuel Greg, later establishing his own busi-
ness. Finally, in 1835, he reverted to engineering as Chief Engineer and
Inspector of Machinery in His Majesty's dockyards.
Another of Boulton and Watt's employees who set up an engineering
business in Manchester was Isaac Perrins, a well-known prizefighter
in his day. He erected the first Boulton and Watt engine in Man-
chester, in Drinkwater's mill in 1789, and after assisting with others
65
The Life of Robert Owen, Written by Himself (1857), I, 22-23. W. H. Chaloner, "Robert
Owen, Peter Drinkwater and the Early Factory System in Manchester, 1788-1800," Bulletin
of the John Rylands Library, XXXVII (Sept. 1954), 78-102.
66
Their partnership was formed in late 1790 or early 1791.
67
Manchester Mercury, February 21, 1792.
68
W. C. Henry, "A Biographical Notice of the late Peter Ewart, Esq.," Memoirs of the
Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society, VII (1846), 113-36; Dickinson and Jenkins,
James Watt and the Steam Engine, pp. 288—89; Ewart's evidence before the S. C. on Artizans
and Machinery, Fourth Report, in Part. Papers, 1824, V, 250.
69
J. Watt to J. Watt, jun., October 16, 1790; P. Ewart to J. Watt, October 10, 1790,
Boulton and Watt Papers, Birmingham Reference Library.
70
P. Ewart to J. Watt, January 17, 1792; P. Ewart to Messrs. Boulton and Watt, August 4,
1792, ibid.
Origins of Engineering 225
moved permanently to Manchester about the end of 1793, took a
public house,71 and carried on erecting for Boulton and Watt. He was
eventually dismissed for drunkenness and other irregularities, but con-
tinued to erect a number of their engines and to do general millwork
as part of his own business.72
The making of textile machinery must obviously have been the
most important branch of early engineering in Lancashire, and the
earliest specialized. There were, however, numerous iron-founding
and forging firms which carried on a more general engineering busi-
ness.73 The smelting and working of iron had been carried on in
Lancashire for centuries, especially in the Furness peninsula, one of
the chief centers of the charcoal iron industry in the eighteenth century,
producing not only pig and bar iron but also a great variety of forged
and cast-iron goods, from kitchenware to cannon.74 South Lancashire,
however, produced a comparatively small quantity of iron. The Haigh
iron works was probably the most important center of production.75
Lesser known, but of some importance for Manchester, were Dukinfield
furnace and foundry. Richard Crowder, of Dukinfield Lodge, was ad-
vertising this iron works for sale in 1782-1783.78 Both ironstone and coal
were available, from which pig iron and castings were produced; the
latter included bored pipes, furnace bars, bearers, fire doors, and frames,
and "all Sorts of large Iron Work." Several hundred tons of pig iron
were to be disposed of at that time. This works was shortly afterwards
taken over by the Manchester and Salford iron-founding firm of
Bateman and Co.77 The bulk of the pig-iron supplies for the Man-
chester foundries, however, was brought in from outside, chiefly from
the Midland iron-producing areas. Aikin (1795) tells us: "The
quantity of pig iron used at the different foundries in Manchester
within these few years, has been very great, and is mostly brought (by
71
See p. 215 of this article.
72
There are innumerable references in the Boulton and Watt papers to Perrins' work in
Manchester.
73
Several of these were important in the manufacture of steam engines. See Musson and
Robinson, "The Early Growth of Steam Power," where this branch of early engineering in
Lancashire is dealt with at length. Some slight overlapping with the previous paper is un-
avoidable here.
7
*Tupling, "The Early Metal Trades," pp. 1-13; B. G. Awty, "Charcoal Ironmasters of Cheshire
and Lancashire, 1600-1785," Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire,
CIX (1957), 71-124.
75
A. Birch, "The Haigh Ironworks, 1789-1856," Bulletin of the John Rylands Library,
XXXV (March 1953), 316-33-
76
Manchester Mercury, July 9, 1782 and April 29, 1783.
77
See p. 226 of this article.
226 A. E. Musson and E. Robinson
canal carriage) from Boatfield [Botfield] and Co's iron furnace, Old
Park, near Coalbrook Dale; and Mr. Brodie's furnace, near the Iron
Bridge, both in Shropshire."78
In Manchester and Salford, only one iron-founding firm appears
in the first directory of 1772, that of Thomas Ryder (or Rider), Scot-
land Bridge. This firm was apparently associated widi Marston Forge,
near Northwich, Cheshire, which was supplying boiler plates for a
Boulton and Watt engine in 1779.79 We know nothing more of their
products until 1796, when they were offering for sale bar iron and
molds, salt pans and salt-pan plates, steam-engine boilers and boiler
plates, other wrought-iron pans and boilers, and "Smiths' work of
any description." m
The most important iron-founding and general engineering concern
in Manchester and Salford in the later eighteenth century was that of
Bateman and Co., later Bateman and Sherratt.81 James Bateman (1749-
1824) came of a Westmorland landed family, at Tolson Hall, near
Kendal, but gave up his birthright to set up in the ironmongery busi-
ness in Salford.82 In the 1773 Manchester and Salford directory he is
found in partnership with Walter Wilson, ironmonger, 24 Deansgate.
Later directories in the eighties show him greatly expanding his busi-
ness interests, to become also an iron founder, Water Street, Salford; an
iron forger, Collyhurst; and an iron founder and forger, Dukinfield.
He appears to have entered into partnership with William Sherratt in
the late eighties and in 1791 they built a new foundry in Hardman
Street, Salford. In later directories they were also described as coal
merchants. By the early eighties this firm was producing a wide range
of cast and forged iron goods, including machine parts for textile and
other mills: 83
This firm was closely associated with Francis Thompson in the manu-
facture of atmospheric steam engines, and also made parts for Boulton
and Watt engines, besides fitting up millwork.
Another firm which entered the Manchester market was that of the
Scotsman, Alexander Brodie (1732-1811), ironmaster and armaments
manufacturer of Calcutts, Broseley, Shropshire, and Carey Street,
Lincoln's Inn Fields, London.89 His first appearance in the Manchester
directories is in 1794, when he owned "St. George's iron foundery,
Knot-mill," in partnership with two others, McNiven and Ormrod.00
As we have seen, he was one of the main suppliers of pig iron to
Manchester foundries.91 Aikin states that he was "well known for his
very extensive manufactory of grates and stoves, as well . . . for
kitchens and dining rooms, as ships."92 Brodie is said to have made
"many thousands" of pounds out of his "patent Stove," though he was
not the inventor.93 He also appears to have carried out general engineer,-
87
Musson and Robinson, "The Early Growth of Steam Power," pp. 420-24.
88
Manchester Mercury, February 27, 1787. Musson and Robinson, "The Early Growth of
Steam Power," 437-38. See P. Robinson, The Smiths of Chesterfield (Chesterfield, privately
printed, 1957), for a short history of this firm, which mined iron ore and coal and operated
several blast furnaces, a forge, and a boring mill in the Chesterfield area. They were the biggest
producers of pig iron in Derbyshire in the early nineteenth century, with an annual output of
2,600 tons. J. Farey, General View of the Agriculture and Minerals of Derbshire (3 vols,;
I8II),I, 397.
88
Musson and Robinson, "The Early Growth of Steam Power," p. 438.
90
Scholes's Manchester and Salford Directory (1794).
81
See p. 226 of this article.
92
Aikin, Description of the Country . . . around Manchester, p. 177.
83
Colonel T. Johnes (Hafod, Radnorshire) to M. Boulton (Birmingham), June 29, 1894,
Assay Office, Birmingham. John Galloway, an eminent nineteenth-century Manchester engineer,
whose foundry was built on the foundations of Brodie's, states that Brodie was "the maker
Origins of Engineering 229
ing work, including piracies of Watt's engine at his Calcutts works, if
not in Manchester.94
Aikin states that in 1795 there were three more foundries in Man-
chester and Salford, in addition to those of Bateman and Sherratt,
Smith and Co., and Brodie and Co., making a total of six. These
others were "Bassett and Smith, Shooter's-brook iron-foundry, Ancoats-
lane"; "Fletcher Phoebe, Old Iron-foundry, 2, Foundery-lane, Red
bank"; and "Smith William, iron-foundry, 23, Lee-street."95 The
1794 directory also includes "Gent John, iron-founder, house, Great
Ancoats-street," but he may possibly have been a foundry manager.
In addition to these iron founders, there were also many ironmongers,
brass founders, coppersmiths, and other metal-working firms in Man-
chester and Salford, which doubtless supplied machine parts. A good
deal of millwork, however, was imported from other areas. It was
reported in the nineties that "many of the castings are done at [Smith
and Co's works at] Chesterfield, some at Low Moor [Bowling Iron-
works, Leeds] and some at [Samuel Walker & Co.'s,] Rotherham." 86
Similarly, Peter Ewart's letters while agent for Boulton and Watt in
Manchester show that most of the boilers for dieir engines were made by
non-Lancashire firms, usually by John Wilkinson at Bersham, though a
few were made in Manchester.
This survey of early engineering in Lancashire, particularly in Man-
chester and Salford, has demonstrated that by the end of the eighteenth
century a very remarkable development had occurred in this area.
Wood and metal workers of all kinds, using lathes, drills, wheel-
cutting engines, and other tools, had been recruited into iron-founding
and machine-making firms, which were producing textile machinery,
steam engines, and other engineering goods. In textile-machine making
especially, owing to the rapidly growing size of the market, a high
degree of specialization was developing. This striking development of
Lancashire engineering coincided with the accelerated growth of the
cotton industry from the early 1780's onwards. No doubt the roots of
this technical development lie deeper in history, in the skills and tools
evolved by clockmakers, millwrights, smiths, and woodworkers in
of a new stove for ships, and had a large connection, especially with Government." Galloway's
MS. "Reminiscences" (Manchester Central Reference Library), p. 20. According to Brodie's
obituary notice in the Gentleman's Magazine (1811), Part I, 89, he "possessed an immense
property."
04
Musson and Robinson, "The Early Growth of Steam Power," p. 438.
"5 Aikin, Description of the Country . . . around Manchester, p. 177.
1)6
J. Lawson (Manchester) to M. R. Boulton (Birmingham), November 15, 1797, Boulton
and Watt Papers, Birmingham Reference Library.
230 A. E. Musson and E. Robinson
earlier years, but mechanical engineering as a distinct industry seems
to have emerged in the last quarter of the eighteenth century. Thus
Lancashire established the necessary technological basis for what Pro-
fessor Rostow has called a "take-off" into rapid industrial growth.97
October 22, /7S2: "Wanted, Wood Turners, Iron Turners, and Filers . . .
Messrs. Wm. Douglas and Co. [cotton spinners] at the Old Hall, Pendle-
ton." Later Douglas and Co. advertised for joiners "to be employed con-
structing Cotton Mill Machinery" (June 7, 1785).
March 11, 1788: "To be Sold, A large Wheel Leath [Lathe], suitable for
Turning large Calender Rollers of Wood or Metal. One ditto smaller, for
turning Bengali Rollers, &c. One ditto Foot Leath. One Ditto Pole Leath . . .
Abraham Clegg, Timber-merchant, Shude-hill, Manchester."
231
232 Appendix
July 1, IJ8S: Sale of cotton factory at Birkacre, Chorley, including "One
large Laith, [driven] by Water; One Foot Ditto; . . . Smith and Clock-
makers Tools," including a "Cutting and Fluting Engine."
January ly, 1792: "Wanted, Two or Three Spindle and Fly Forgers . . ."
January 31, 1J92: "Wanted, Journeymen Joiners, and one or two that are
perfect in fitting up water machinery and mules. Likewise, several Clock
Makers, to fitt up the clock work for mules and water machines. A good
Iron and Wood Turner—and a capital Smith and Filer, for spinning
frames and mules. Also a Carder for mule preparation, and a person mat
can make even Rovings, on a stretching frame . . . Apply at Ford and
Almond's Brass Foundry, Old Church Yard, Manchester." John Ford was
originally a tin-plate worker, Bottom Smithy-door (1772 Manchester
Directory); began making "Tin Rollers for Spinning Jennies" (May 9,
1780); also became a brazier and brass founder (February 16, 1790); and
was now not only able to make complete spinning machines, but was also
apparently engaged in the manufacture of mule rovings.
"November 19, 1793: "Wanted for a Cotton Factory. A capital Joiner and
Clock Maker, who has been accustomed to fit up Spinning Frames, Mules,
and Preparation Machines . . . James Sheldon and Co., Old Quay, Man-
chester." This firm later, as machine makers, advertised mules, carding
engines, etc. (February 24, 1795).
August 26,1794: Sale of Holt Town Cotton Mills, belonging to David Holt,
including "a large Quantity of excellent Materials and Implements, for
the Purpose of Machine Making, and which consists of a large Assortment
of dry Timber . . . Iron and Brass, Smiths, Joiners, and Clockmakers
Tools."
November 11, 1794: "Wanted, A Brass Founder. One who has been ac-
customed to Casting for Machinery . . . Robert Atherton, Machine Maker,
near Mottram in Longdendale, Cheshire."