Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
science/biology

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Mill town

Settlement that developed around one or more mills or factories

Mill town

Summary

Settlement that developed around one or more mills or factories

A mill town, also known as factory town or mill village, is typically a settlement that developed around one or more mills or factories, often cotton mills or factories producing textiles.

Europe

Italy

Crespi d'Adda (Italy)
  • Crespi d'Adda, UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Nuovo quartiere operaio in Schio
  • Villaggio Leumann a Collegno
  • Villaggio Frua in Saronno
  • Villaggio operaio della Filatura in Tollegno

Poland

Żyrardów – winter panorama of main square

Żyrardów

The town grew out of a textile factory founded in 1833 by the sons of Feliks Lubienski, who owned the land where it was built. They brought in a specialist from France and his newly designed machines. He was French inventor, Philippe de Girard from Lourmarin. He became a director of the firm. The factory town developed during the 19th century into a significant textile mill town in Poland. In honour of Girard, 'Ruda Guzowska' as the original estate was called, was renamed Żyrardów, a toponym derived of the polonised spelling of Girard's name.

Most of Żyrardów's monuments are located in the manufacturing area which dates from the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is widely believed that Żyrardów's textile settlement is the only entire urban industrial complex from the 19th-century to be preserved in Europe.

Russian Empire

  • Bogorodsk-Glukhovo factory
  • Nikolskoye, Vladimir Governorate

United Kingdom

East Mill in Derbyshire, UK

In the United Kingdom, the term "mill town" usually refers to the 19th-century textile manufacturing towns of northern England and the Scottish Lowlands, particularly those in Lancashire (cotton) and Yorkshire (wool).

Some former mill towns have a symbol of the textile industry in their town badge. Some towns may have statues dedicated to textile workers (e.g. Colne) or have a symbol in the badge of local schools (e.g. Ossett School).

CountyTowns
Cheshire mill towns
Derbyshire mill towns
Greater Manchester mill towns
Lancashire mill towns
Yorkshire mill towns

The list above includes some towns where textiles was not the predominant industry. For example, mining was a key industry in Wigan and Leigh in Greater Manchester, and in Ossett in Yorkshire.

Date1883189319031913192319261933194419531962
Accrington59043846766019171846928715292
Ashton1,5741,7311,7811,95518981,144644633182
Blackburn1,6711,3981,3211,2801,2241,071672451309103
Bolton4,0864,7705,4576,7977,3717,8427,5076,2044,8861,772
Burnley1,12673466756353850724018214414
Bury87589983395510501000745630524268
Chorley552527541856838837739491397122
Farnworth5577799661,4851,4781,4841,3441,2371,104162
Glossop1,1061,15896888282183952420415410
Heywood6608878361,0701,1001,09686454553368
Hyde59049953374179369647536633758
Leigh1,3371,5141,6792,4452,7612,9252,8912,6152,336548
Manchester2,4452,353,2,2253,7033,3073,4393,4172,9741,934271
Middleton4984946451,2781,2681,2521,0411,193923161
Mossley1,1531,2171,0331,2881,2971,289371264256-
Oldham9,31111,15912,23016,90917,23117,66913,7328,9487,6212,478
Preston2,1461,8832,0742,1611,9971,9651,5921,1461,024278
Rochdale1,6271,8352,4223,6453,7493,7933,5392,4591,936983
Stalybridge1,0831,1571,0271,2361,1041,103801483426122
Stockport1,6011,7421,5682,2662,3821,9241,4271,141154
Wigan8647758881,0851,1231,141922681575352

In thousands of spindles.

On his tour of northern England in 1849, Scottish publisher Angus Reach said:

The term mill town was revived in the British media during the debate over relations between whites and Asians in the aftermath of riots in several mill towns in the early 2000s, including the 2001 Oldham riots and 2001 Bradford riots. The term conveniently groups together towns on both sides of the Pennines that suffer from sometimes significant racial tension. Some mill towns in northern England are known today as "mill and mosque towns" because of the large number of British Pakistani Muslims who live there. After the Second World War, thousands of migrants from both the Caribbean and the Indian subcontinent settled in the mill towns to fill the labour shortage in the industry; they moved to traditional working-class areas whilst the white working-class moved out to the newly built estates after the war.

North America

United States ===

New England and Northeast

website=peabodylibrary.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref>
The [[Androscoggin River]] at [[Berlin, New Hampshire

Beginning with Samuel Slater and technological information smuggled out of England by Francis Cabot Lowell, large mills were established in New England in the early to mid-19th century. Mill towns, sometimes planned, built and owned as a company town, grew in the shadow of the industries. The region became a manufacturing powerhouse along rivers like the Housatonic, Quinebaug, Shetucket, Blackstone, Merrimack, Nashua, Cocheco, Saco, Androscoggin, Kennebec or Winooski.

In the 20th century, alternatives to water power were developed, and it became more profitable for companies to manufacture textiles in southern states where cotton was grown and winters did not require significant heating costs. Finally, the Great Depression acted as a catalyst that sent several struggling New England firms into bankruptcy.

StateTowns
Connecticut mill towns
Maine mill towns
Massachusetts mill towns
New Hampshire mill towns
New Jersey mill towns
New York mill towns
Rhode Island mill towns
Vermont mill towns

File:Assawaga Mill postcard.jpg|Assawaga Mill, Dayville, CT, in 1909 File:American Thread Co. Mill.jpg|American Thread Co. Mill, Willimantic, CT, c. 1910 File:Hollingsworth & Whitney Paper Mills.jpg|Hollingsworth & Whitney Paper Mill, Waterville, ME, c. 1920 File:Cumberland Mills, Westbrook, ME.jpg|Cumberland Mills, Westbrook, ME, c. 1902 File:Grade crossing arch at Mill Street - postcard.jpg|Mill Street, Attleboro, MA, in 1908 File:Arlington Mills, Lawrence, MA.jpg|Arlington Mills, Lawrence, MA, in 1907 File:Merrimack Falls, Lawrence, MA.jpg|Merrimack Falls, Lawrence, MA, c. 1905 File:Noon Hour at Amoskeag Mills.jpg|Amoskeag Mills, Manchester, NH, c. 1912 File:Jackson Mills, Nashua, NH.jpg|Jackson Mills, Nashua, NH, in 1907 File:Alice Mills Rubber Mfg. Plant.jpg|Alice Mills, Woonsocket, RI, in 1911 File:Colchester Mills, Winooski, VT.jpg|Colchester Mills, Winooski, VT, in 1907

Midwest

StateTowns
Wisconsin mill towns

South

StateTowns
Alabama mill towns
Arkansas mill towns
Georgia mill towns
Maryland mill towns
North Carolina mill towns
South Carolina mill towns

File:ChadwickMills.jpg|Model Mill Settlement, Chadwick Mills, Charlotte, N.C. Published c. 1905–1915 File:WhiteOakMills.jpg|White Oak Cotton Mills, Greensboro, N.C. c. 1914 File:Wareshoalsmill.jpg|Aerial view of Ware Shoals Mill

Sawmill towns

StateTowns
IllinoisCarrier Mills, Harrisburg
OregonRoseburg
WashingtonLongview
WisconsinEau Claire

South America

Colombia

  • San José de Suaita

Notes

References

References

  1. "Crespi D'Adda UNESCO – Sito ufficiale".
  2. "Associazione Amici della Scuola del Villaggio Leumann".
  3. "Abitare a Saronno tra '800 e '900".
  4. "Villaggio operaio della Filatura".
  5. Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Girard, Philippe Henri de". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  6. (24 July 2018). "Steel statue tribute of mill girl". BBC.
  7. Williams, Mike. (1992). "Cotton Mills of Greater Manchester". Carnegie Publishing.
  8. Powell, Rob. (1986). "In the Wake of King Cotton". Rochdale Art Gallery.
  9. [[Nick Cohen]], [https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2001/jul/01/immigration.race Fist in the kid glove], [[The Guardian]], 1 July 2001
  10. Andrew Norfolk, [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,17129-2155281,00.html July suicide bomber 'is an invisible poster boy'], ''[[The Times]]'', April 28, 2006
  11. [http://www.unison.org.uk/activists/pages_view.asp?did=388 It's time to stand up], ''[[UNISON]]'', 17 April 2003
  12. (2002-06-18). "From scholarship, sailors and sects to the mills and the mosques.". The Guardian.
  13. [http://www.cottontown.org/page.cfm?pageid=1675&language=eng The Arrival of the Asian Population], ''Cotton Town: Your Town, Your History''
  14. WRITER, ALAN BURKE STAFF. "Leather goes to War at Peabody's Leather Museum".
  15. "Peabody Institute Library : Online Collections".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Mill town — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report