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Cloth Making Menu

An Introduction
Who Did What?
Clothier
Woolstapler
Dyer
Willower
Scribbler
Blender
Carder
Slubbing
Spinner
Quilley Winder
Warper
Weaver
Finishing
Burler
Scourer
Mender
Fuller
Tentering
Raiser
Shearer
Presser
Factor

CLOTH MAKING IN TROWBRIDGE

An Introduction to Cloth Making

By 1500, unfinished white broadcloth was an important export from West Wiltshire. Clothiers bought wool which they passed on to be carded, spun and then woven into cloth.

This was a cottage industry where the weaver worked at home, helped by his family who did spinning and winding. Some weavers’ houses with large top floor windows still survive in Trowbridge.

Cloth making gradually became mechanised and factory based but the industry declined and the last mill closed in 1982.

Visit Trowbridge Museum, which is in this last mill, to see a range of machines used in the local cloth making industry. The earliest, a wooden spinning jenny from the 1790s, the latest, a Hattersley loom which is demonstrated each Saturday. Cloth is still being made in Trowbridge!

The history of the rise and fall of the West of England woollen cloth trade can be found in Ken Roger’s book, Warp and Weft, (Barracuda Books, 1986).

 


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