Article ID: CBB001421791

The Origins of the Power Loom Revisited (2014)

unapi

Holden, Roger N. (Author)


International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology
Volume: 84, no. 2
Issue: 2
Pages: 135-159
Publication date: 2014
Language: English


In mechanizing spinning, productivity gains arose by enabling multiple threads to be spun at a time. A re-reading of Edmund Cartwright's original power loom patent of 1785 shows that, contrary to the story he later told, he was seeking to do the same in weaving by weaving multiple webs at one time. This attempt failed and future efforts to mechanize weaving focused on mechanizing the traditional horizontal loom, with productivity increases coming through increasing speeds and enabling one person to manage more than one loom. To achieve this required the solution of a number of non-trivial engineering problems and it was not until around 1860 that the power loom could be used to weave the full range of cloths produced by the Lancashire cotton industry. Key people in this development were William Horrocks of Stockport, Richard Roberts of Manchester and the Blackburn engineers of the 1840s.

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Authors & Contributors
Holden, Roger N.
Greenlees, Janet
Hornborg, Alf
Li, Jinsong
Minoletti, Paul
Owen, Geoffrey
Journals
Technology and Culture
Agricultural History
Business History Review
Chinese Journal for the History of Science and Technology
Continuity and Change
Economic History Review
Publishers
Self-published by the author
Cambridge University Press
Ashgate
Oxford University Press
Concepts
Textile industry
Cotton and cotton industry
Textiles
Weaving
Technology and industry
Technology
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century, early
20th century
17th century
20th century, late
Places
Great Britain
China
England
India
United States
Japan
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