Lost Mills Map and Local Area Studies

I grew up next to Marriner’s and I actually watched it burn down. It would have been in the ‘70s. I was in my grandma’s house when the fire started ‘cos she lived round the corner. And I watched it burn down stood next to Dr Who off the telly at the time. Which was Jon Pertwee. Because he’d been driving past, and he’d pulled in to see what all… things and he stood and watched it burn.

Andrew Walton

Serviceman, Hayfield Mill

Bradford’s Remaining Textile Landscape

Photograph: Bradford Mill Chimneys 1974 by Matthew Davison | Interviewee: Rebecca Ough

Rebecca Ough | Transcript

I’ve worked at a few different mills in Yorkshire, so I guess I have been part of like the textile landscape, I guess you could call it. Because it’s not… there’s still, there is still some some really high quality mills operating around here. I think maybe people assume that it’s in the past and it’s not really happening anymore. But you still have these really top quality, like world renowned mills. A.W. Hainsworth is a really good example. They weave all the Royal Guard fabric for the guards in London, transport fabrics for airplanes, protective fabrics for the fire brigade.

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Workforce’s Reaction to Drummond’s Mill Clo- sure in the 90s

Photograph: Drummonds Mill by C H Wood | Interviewee: Michael Stoney

Michael Stoney | Transcript

MS: Drummonds weren’t a good firm to work for. They were particularly ruthless with culling people, you know.

LMI: And this was in the ‘90s?

MS: Yeah, yeah. They were just run by accountants really. I mean when Drummonds came to the mill at Lindley… I mean that they had a guy in there for about six months, and they just took the, you know, everything was costed down to the last thread. They were just ruthless the way they treated people, I thought.

LMI: Did that make the workforce unhappy? 

MS: Oh, yeah. Well, they knew the writing was on the wall. And there was a sense of unease because they knew people were in… and probably the history of Drummonds, you know, they’d closed down a lot of mills, and they knew it was coming, really.

In Yorkshire, the managers and supervisors treated Asian workers like third-class citizens, were incredibly rude to us and called us by shouting, ‘Oi!’. We were in need of work, so we put up with their abuse. In Lancashire the attitude towards Asian workers was better than in Yorkshire. In Yorkshire they held such hatred towards us and didn’t treat us as humans. The other thing about Yorkshire was that if you were under twenty-five, they made you do a full workload, but gave you half the salary. In Lancashire they didn’t, they gave you a full salary, so I moved to Lancashire.

Ashtiaq Ahmed

Spinner, Thornton Spinning

Anne Marie Shackleton | Transcript

I was quite sad because it’s such a gothic building. And it’s so much of Keighley’s history. And it was so horrendous. Because there were so many…I reckon it’ll be haunted. I reckon there’ll be…there’ll be quite a few souls in there. Because it was horrendous. If you imagine them working there, the kiddies used to work there, and it were hard.

Illingworth’s – out of the three jobs [I had] that was the best one. It was the cleanest out of the three. Doing the same job yeah. I had the run of the mill. I could go anywhere in it! I could go right in the deepest basements, right to the top attics, you know. I used to love it! I used to go and hide upstairs. And there was an old guy in the yarn store, a really old white guy, really he said ‘Oh, you want a cup of tea, lad?’ He’d make me a cup of tea, and we’d sit there for ages just chin wagging, about nothing. And that was their work. I said, ‘I want your job, mate.’ He was just in charge of stores. He used to sit there drinking tea and coffee and I used to take carts to him, and he used to say, ‘Right, ok.’ And tick it off and put it in. That’s it.

Mohammed Umar

Commuting Home with Hearing Loss from Weaving Shed

Interviewee: Christopher Ackroyd

Christopher Ackroyd | Transcript

Spinning mills weren’t as noisy as weaving. I worked in a weaving shed once for two weeks, in Silsden, after I’d left, but before I went to college. And they gave me a job there for two or three weeks, at Easter, I think. Just to make a bit of pocket money. And I was a battery filler in the weaving shed and I used to walk home from Silsden to Riddlesden. And I’d get to Riddlesden before I could hear properly. An hour afterwards, every day. Now I was only doing that for two or three weeks. And again, it’s mainly women who worked in those places. They were doing it forever. Yeah. And it affected the way they speak to each other, sign language and all of that. The humour…

Gill Beck by Cath Muldowney

Photo: Gill Beck by Cath Muldowney

You would stop seeing a particular mill showing up in the book every morning and it’s like, ‘Oh no, they’re finished, they don’t work. They’re closed.’ As you drove around, you’d see more and more sites being demolished. At the time, and this is kind of the mid to late ‘90s, there wasn’t a lot of redevelopment. You could see stuff being pulled down, and the stone being carted away and possibly all the cast iron and so on. But I think they were not looking at it as a site to redevelop, they were just looking at it as salvage materials. Because these [were] all clad in stone with valley guttering with stonework on it as well. And so I think the fabric of the building itself was more valuable.

Dan Lee

Sampler, Wool Testing Services International

Things to do...

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What to do next...

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What to do next...

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Lost Mills

Ghost Mansions

Lost Mills & Ghost Mansions

Lost Mills & Ghost Mansions

Photograph: UNSPUN by Tim Smith Photograph: Workers of Salts Mill from Eileen Mellor The Sangat Centre at Bradford Industrial Museum Northern Broadside did theatre productions in the derelict parts of the mill. When I was in there, I was thinking, 'I wonder if this is...

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Archive

Archive

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Ghost Mansions Case Studies

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Do It Yourself

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Time Off

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Diverse workforce

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The supervisors were white, whilst the machinists were Asians: Pakistani, Bengali and Indians. All very friendly. People looked out for each other and helped new ones get settled. This has changed. AD: How many people worked there? LM: 80-100 I should think, ‘cause...

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Working life

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Spinning Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.   "Lorem ipsum dolor...

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Wordsmithery winning scripts

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Winning scripts   We have four Wordsmithery winning scripts! There was a high level of submissions from across Bradford and the quality and range of writing styles was fascinating to read.   The winners are:   The Crack by Sarah Goodyear Not So Smart-Whips by Tahir...

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