Search

Displaying 71 - 80 of 1111
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… draining. The inhabitants are partly employed in hand-loom weaving. The Blackburn and Clitheroe railway passes through. …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… Ackroyd and others; in the combing of wool; and in the weaving of stuffs and woollen-cloths, the former for the …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… in local society. During that period also new cottage weaving settlements arose in outlying parts of the three …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… by emigration. In 1837 68 people, most of them members of weaving families, left for New South Wales financed by the …
Dictionary of Traded Goods and Commodities
… or the processes for whitening HEMP and FLAX, prior to weaving or ROPE making, for example [Patents (1678)]; …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… picturesque and beautiful. The population is employed in weaving, bleaching, and dyeing cotton and silk; the silk-dye …
A History of the County of Lancaster
… apart from agriculture, the industries were hand-loom weaving of cotton, wood-bobbin making, lime burning and stone …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… extinct, and the woollen manufacture is confined to the weaving of the yarn spun in private families into what are …
Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters
… a pred xxv die Julij Anno RR xvj [assignat appren Roberto Weaving Civi et Pannar London uten. etc]. 81 Johannes …
Displaying 71 - 80 of 1111